"Influences of conformity and obedience paper" Essays and Research Papers

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    “On the Duty of Civil Obedience” I do not accept the motto. –“That government is best which governs least.” Government is a completely necessary institution. Without it‚ nations would crumble‚ famine would flourish‚ and massacres would occur daily. Of course it would be nice if humans didn’t need government‚ if men’s moral compasses all pointed in the same (correct) general direction. But they do not. It is just a far-fetched fantasy of perfection‚ it is impractical. Which is why government is necessary

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    In The Perils of Obedience‚ Stanley Milgram expresses his findings of an experiment he conducted trying to prove the lengths people will go to be obedient to authority. The first experiments included a group of undergraduates from Yale. The experiments involved three subjects: the experimenter‚ the “teacher” and the “learner”. The teacher would read off a series of words. The learner‚ who is strapped to an electric chair‚ would be required to remember the words associated to one another. If the

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    a wrong direction. The education must aim for enlightenments because the education is important. The school is just like our society where the power takes over justices and oppress individuals’ freedom under the name of regulations and customs. Obedience is the virtue in the school. “Whips” and professors treat younger students as their private servant. They abuse their prerogatives as

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    been conducted on the concept of conformity. Recognized studies of conformity include those like the Asch line-judgment studies‚ the Stanford Prison Experiment‚ etc. Hoping to advance in studies of conformity‚ scientists Kim & Hommel (2015) and Koban & Wager (2016) recently conducted experiments that demonstrate how the opinions and behaviors of others cause a change in the original opinion of an individual‚ also known as conformity. Another way to describe conformity is the changing of one’s beliefs

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    3681 Abstract Conformity is an aspect of psychology that is prevalent in our everyday lives. We are constantly looking to others for guidance‚ and in doing so we conform to the norms we establish as groups. But what sorts of factors affect conformity? What causes conformity? Do people conform uniformly between cultures? The question I will investigate in this paper is “how does culture influence social conformity to groups?” In addition to investigating the causes of conformity‚ I will investigate

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    Eliza Janica Fisher College Social Psychology May 26‚ 2012 Conformity To Cult Behavior   In the early 1960s‚ psychologists in the United States interviewed several U.S. soldiers and American Prisoners of War returning home from combat against North Korea. Their main focus in particular were on those who had suffered an extreme change in their personality. These young soldiers had experienced being brainwashed under the communists. Psychologist have later realized that people involved in cults

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    family; although we have many laughs at home too. Other people might be the opposite. Although conforming is necessary in places like work or school; its not when your in an environment that is un safe‚ or there is someone there who is a bad influence. It’s very hard not to conform when your with your peers. Peer pressure is a huge thing in our society. that’s when people end up making a lot of bad decisions and getting in trouble. Whether your fifteen or thirty-seven people always make bad choices

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    acquired through socialization‚ society encompasses and shapes an individual at an extremely young age. In the context of a controlled environment such as the mental institution‚ this leaves the patients within the novel especially vulnerable to conformity. Harding’s acceptance of the unjust power dynamics within the ward is a splendid example of the lethargy present. "This world... belongs to the strong‚ my friend! …. We must learn to accept it as a law of the natural world.” (Kesey 54-55) He doesn’t

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    There were many factors that contributed to the obedience of the manager and other employees in the McDonalds case. The most evident factor was the voice that stated he was a police officer and had the restaurants manager on the other line stating that the employee stole from a customer. The assistant manager complied with the voice because she felt he was a legitimate authority figure. Summer engages in an authority role as an assistant manager but took on a role of being a law abiding citizen.

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    Obedience to destructive authority is a recurrent social issue in human history. And more than often‚ human beings do not need to hear the imperative sentence “ Thou Shalt Obey ” in order to comply with a destructive rule‚ a questionable decision‚ or with an odd order. All over the world‚ human beings seem to strive toward obedience to destructive authority. I could not help but connect this reasoning with real-life events such as the Holocaust‚ suicide bombings‚ and local events such as the case

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