plenty of research into automatic responses to figures of authority, what is possibly more interesting is the example you gave ie Nazism, why did you choose that and not maybe the pilots that dropped the bombs on hiroshima/nagasaki?
weird...... what happened to me quoting the post from treble?
Think you posted the quote first by mistake

I quoted nazis bcos in the documentaries etc I've seen about this, it's the example used. I agree it could apply to the pilots who dropped the Hiroshima bomb.
The only difference however is that with the nazis it was highlighting the direct human contact and "dehumanisation" process. So in concentration camps, normal Germans were conditioned to perform horrific acts against ppl who they saw everyday and were their prisoners, and believing it to be ok (much like the electricution experiment Sisu mentioned). By the way we saw the exact same effects in Abu Ghraib.
Also you have to wonder the same thing about how Hitler managed to condition an entire nation... but then we always think good & evil is easily defined but the truth is it happens to us also with every conflict. The things we condone as "necessary" actions like the use of drones to kill innocent ppl indiscriminately who have had no trial or due process of justice. Where we condone 2000 people including 500 children being bombed and killed in the Gaza strip.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-14564182
See the bit after the scientist says he took on the persona of a cruel guard towards the others.
This is the most profound point....
"It was rapidly spiralling out of control," said prison guard Mr Eshleman who hid behind his mirrored sunglasses and a southern US accent.
"I kept looking for the limits - at what point would they stop me and say 'No, this is only an experiment and I have had enough', but I don't think I ever reached that point."
He had to stop the experiment before something serious happened. The Stanford Experiment is a great example of how we are conditioned to dehumanise others... to this day.


