Thanks—interesting read. There have in fact been a couple of re-enactments;
for example, see Wikipedia. But, as you suggest, the Milgram experiments could be used as
well. In either case, doing some in-depth analysis of the participants would
be very useful.
Have you read Milgram’s book, Obedience to Authority? He does some analyses of the participants in various versions of his experiment (as well as explaining why the experiment isn’t unethical).
Thanks for the link—I’ll put it on my reading list. For some reason I only know Milgram’s work from secondary sources.
Also relevant here are the Asch conformity experiments ; they also show the tendency of most people to conform, without the dramatic effects used in the Milgram experiments.
Thanks—interesting read. There have in fact been a couple of re-enactments; for example, see Wikipedia. But, as you suggest, the Milgram experiments could be used as well. In either case, doing some in-depth analysis of the participants would be very useful.
Have you read Milgram’s book, Obedience to Authority? He does some analyses of the participants in various versions of his experiment (as well as explaining why the experiment isn’t unethical).
Thanks for the link—I’ll put it on my reading list. For some reason I only know Milgram’s work from secondary sources.
Also relevant here are the Asch conformity experiments ; they also show the tendency of most people to conform, without the dramatic effects used in the Milgram experiments.