Here’s an article in the latest issue of the British Psychological Society journal, “Questioning the banality of evil” (via Metafilter). As the title indicates, it’s a re-examination of the established view, supposedly originating with Hannah Arendt and her book on Eichmann, and supported by experiments like those of Stanley Milgram and Philip Zimbardo, that we’re all susceptible to the power of the group and given half a chance will follow like sheep behind even (especially?) the most barbaric of leaders.

The re-examination, it has to be said, is not that radical. On Eichmann, and the banality of evil that Arendt identified, for instance:

In short, the true horror of Eichmann and his like is not that their actions were blind. On the contrary, it is that they saw clearly what they did, and believed it to be the right thing to do.

Which conclusion, to my mind, isn’t so much an argument against Arendt as an indication that they’re setting up a straw Arendt, as it were, and misrepresenting what she actually said. She never claimed that Eichmann wasn’t aware of what he was doing: rather that he saw himself as a mere functionary, just doing his job.

The authors go on to question some of the assumptions of the Milgram and Zimbardo experiments, and much of what they say is interesting. But again their conclusion is less than revolutionary:

Until recently, psychologists and historians have agreed that ordinary people commit evil when, under the influence of leaders and groups, they become blind to the consequences of their actions. This consensus has become so strong that it is repeated, almost as a mantra, in psychology textbooks and in society at large. However critical scrutiny of both historical and psychological evidence – along with a number of new studies, e.g. Krueger (in press); Staub (in press) – has produced a radically different picture. People do great wrong, not because they are unaware of what they are doing but because they consider it to be right. This is possible because they actively identify with groups whose ideology justifies and condones the oppression and destruction of others.

As before I can’t help thinking that they’re misrepresenting what they identify as the consensus, and as a result end up making their own position that much more “radically different”. Just as Arendt never doubted that Eichmann knew what he was doing, so later psychologists haven’t in general argued that people who commit evil “become blind to the consequences of their actions”. The authors’ conclusion, that “people do great wrong, not because they are unaware of what they are doing but because they consider it to be right”, comes across in the end – as so much of this kind of psychology tends to – as a great big clunking statement of the bleeding obvious.

I don’t doubt that experiments like Milgram’s or Zimbardo’s are of interest. I’m not going to repeat all the arguments here – I’ve already posted about Milgram, here and here, and about Zimbardo here. It still seems to me that the most significant lessons we learn from those experiments, in terms of the propensity for people to do evil, aren’t about the behaviour of the subjects, but rather concern the behaviour of the psychologists who ran the experiments. In both cases the subjects were put through lengthy experiences that were deeply upsetting, in many cases traumatic and humiliating, often with lasting consequences to their mental health. The psychologists who then went on to pontificate at length on the failings of these wretches, and not incidentally made names for themselves by so doing, never for a moment doubted the propriety of what they did. In terms of human suffering in general this may be minor stuff, but it nicely demonstrates how people can inflict suffering on others “because they consider it to be right”.

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6 responses to “The Banality of Psychology”

  1. Ophelia Benson Avatar

    “The psychologists who then went on to pontificate at length on the failings of these wretches, and not incidentally made names for themselves by so doing, never for a moment doubted the propriety of what they did.”
    In all fairness, Mick, that’s not true of Zimbardo at least. (I don’t know about Milgram.) He didn’t doubt the propriety of what he was doing at the time – but his girlfriend (and former student and then colleague) called him on it, and as it were the scales fell from his eyes. He promptly terminated the experiment – and he condemns himself quite strongly for needing an outside push to doubt the propriety of what he was doing. This fact has become very much a part of the findings of the experiment – he thinks his own failings are much more conspicuous and to the point than those of his subjects. It’s all quite interesting, actually.

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  2. dearieme Avatar
    dearieme

    What, academics behaving disgracefully to advance their careers? Another sneaky allusion to Global Warming, I presume?

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  3. Mick H Avatar
    Mick H

    Ophelia – yes, having written that, I remembered that Zimbardo had to some extent acknowledged that he’d treated his subjects badly, and I thought about putting in a caveat, but in the end didn’t bother. You’re quite right.

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  4. John M Avatar
    John M

    I have never been convinced by the conclusions gnerally drawn from the Zimbardo experiment for the simple reason that the ‘victims’ in the prison scenrio were free to leave at any time and were, therefore, consenting to their ‘abuse’. In other words, they were willing participants in a complex game, a sado-masochistic sex game in my opinion, and the experiment can only, therefore, be revealing of patterns of game play and can tell us nothing about human motivations for evil any more than watching ‘Big Brother’ can. If the ‘jailed’ students had really been abducted against their will and had not been permitted to stroll out when they chose, do you really think the ‘jailer’ students would have acted in the same way? I am pretty sure that a majority would hve reused to participate in those circumstances. At least one of the ‘jailers’ is on record as saying that they realised right away what sort of thing was expected of them by Zimbardo and they served it up. Who wants to disappoint the prof? Of course, there may be an element of self-exculpation in that, but it may just be true too.

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  5. Noga Avatar

    This is a review by Martha Nussbaum. Just in case you didn’t link to it in this connection:
    http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/the_tls/article2677344.ece?ILC-EVYcomments&ATTR=nussbaum

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  6. leigbshea Avatar

    users few models majority galactic points bush

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