What makes us so Compliant.

by Jang 5 Replies latest jw friends

  • Jang
    Jang

    Compliance

    There is not only a personal need to agree with others but strong pressure exerted by the group on any person with different opinions to comply with the majority. Promises, arguments, and threats are used to get agreement. If someone steadfastly refuses to agree with the group, he/she is frequently rejected and ignored.

    Usually the more deviant group members (those taking an extreme position) and the entire group move in the direction favored by the majority. This has become known as group polarization (Deaux & Wrightsman, 1984). It can be thought of as a "jump on the band wagon" effect or "go along with the majority" effect. However, we do not yet know under what conditions private opinions are actually changed, if they are, in these more complex situations. Perhaps as we learn more about a certain opinion and argue for it, we come to believe it more. Perhaps we just don't want to make waves. Perhaps we "know which side of our bread is buttered." It's all compliance.

    There are other specific conditions in which we tend to comply with direct requests. For instance, once we have granted one request, we are more likely to comply with another request. So a salesperson will make a small request first: "May I ask you a few questions?" and "May we sit down?" Finally, "May I order you one?" This is called the "foot in the door" technique. Another approach is the "door in the face" technique: first, someone makes a very large request of you and you say "no" (that's the door in the face). They graciously accept your refusal and then a few days or weeks later the same person approaches you with a much more modest request. You are more likely to comply this time than if you had never been approached. Thirdly, there is the old "low ball" technique: first, get a person to agree to some unusually good deal, then change the conditions and the person will still agree to the new conditions. For example, a car salesperson might offer you a
    fantastic deal or a teacher might request some help. Once you agree, then the sales person "discovers" a mistake and raises the price or the teacher tells you it's a dirty job at 7:00 AM, but you still go through with the agreement.

    Deaux and Wrightsman (1984) summarized the research that shows independent people are more intellectually able, more capable leaders, more mature, more self-controlled, and more self-confident. Conforming people are self-critical, have lower self-esteem, and have stronger needs to interact with others socially. Don't get suckered into bad deals.

    Obedience to authority

    The most impressive and appalling studies in this area were done by Stanley Milgram (1974). They are famous studies. Milgram's intent was to see how much harm ordinary people would do to another person if directed and urged to do so by an authority (a psychologist asking them to shock a person when he/she gave a wrong answer in a learning experiment). Actually, no one was shocked but the subjects obviously believed they were hurting another participant in the experiment. The shock was to be increased with every mistake. To do this there were 30 switches at 15-volt intervals labeled as follows: Slight shock (15-60 volts), Moderate shock (75-120 volts), etc. on up to Extreme-intensity shock (315-360 volts), DANGER--severe shock (375-420 volts), and XXX (435-450 volts). Most of us would assume that our friends and relatives wouldn't do such a mean, dangerous thing. Certainly, we wouldn't. Especially if the person being shocked in the next room started moaning (at 75 volts) and then yelling, "Hey, that really hurts" (at 120 volts) and then at 150 volts, "Experimenter, get me out of here!...I refuse to go on!" At 180 volts the victim cries, "I can't stand the pain." Later, there are agonized screams after every shock and he pounds on the wall pleading with you...and finally at 330 volts the subject falls silent. When the shocker wants to stop the psychologist simply says, "Please continue" or "You must go on." What do most people do?

    Amazingly, 65% of the subjects went all the way to 450 volts! In fact, every one of the 40 subjects administered at least 300 volts! Milgram wrote, "Many subjects will obey the experimenter no matter how vehement the pleading of the person being shocked...It is the extreme willingness of adults to go to almost any lengths on the command of an authority that constitutes the chief finding of this study and the fact most urgently demanding explanation." The subjects administering the shock were not sadistic monsters nor very angry nor prejudiced against the learner nor indifferent (they appeared to be very stressed).

    So, why or how do we humans do such things? Milgram says the subjects:
    (1) became absorbed in pleasing the authority and doing their assignment just right,
    (2) denied their responsibility, "the experimenter was a Ph. D." or just like Lt. Calley or Adolf Eichmann, many of the subjects said, "I wouldn't have done it by myself, I was just doing what I was told,"
    (3) started to believe that the experiment was vitally important and that the pursuit of truth is a "noble cause" (even though someone has to suffer),
    (4) blamed the victim, "he was so stupid and stubborn he deserved to get shocked," and, most importantly,
    (5) just couldn't bring themselves to act on their values and defy authority.

    This deference to authority is a serious problem, not just in terms of kowtowing to government officials, but also to "experts," doctors, bosses, owners, authors, and many others who are eager to tell you what to do.

    Socially instilled obedience

    Milgram's reasons sound mostly like excuses for our immoral attempts to curry favor with an important person. Considering the great stress the subjects experienced and the fact that they were only paid $4.00 for one hour of work for an experimenter they would never see again, there must have been some other very powerful needs to please the psychologist. What, then, are the real reasons we are so ineffective and intimidated by authority? I suspect it is due to years of indoctrination (internalization) by the people and institutions most dear to us--parents, schools, religion, government, etc. Most of the time conformity and obedience are helpful and morally good. The same trait, unquestioning obedience, that produces the good child at home, the good church member, and the good student at school may also have produced the calloused and cruel abuse in the Milgram study, in Nazi Germany, in the Vietnamese war, etc. We must learn to be "good" and to think for ourselves.

    Research (Head, Baker, & Williamson, 1991) indicates that persons diagnosed as "dependent personality disorder" tend to come from families that had rigid rules, including "do not express your emotions openly" and "don't be independent--do what you are told, follow the family traditions, obey your parents." Hitler's father was the unquestioned authority in his family; Hitler re-created his family situation and established himself as the unquestioned authority of the Fatherland. Every dictatorial authoritarian must have dependent, compliant followers. Unfortunately, neither authoritarians nor dependent people get much practice at functioning independently as equals.

    In the process of growing up we are exposed to enormous pressures to be compliant or conforming.
    Examples:
    (1) Parents often demand obedience, "Do it because I say so!" This may continue even after the "children" are 18 or 20 years old. Overprotective parents produce frightened, dependent children.
    (2) Peers reward going along with the crowd.
    (3) Teachers expect you to do the assignments, not plan and carry out your own education.
    (4) We are expected to get married and we are led to believe that love and marriage will solve most of our problems; we depend upon and long for all these benefits from marriage.
    (5) Government regulates much of our lives; it is drilled into us to follow the law. Have you ever been driving at 3:00 AM and noticed that you stopped and waited for all the red lights to change even though no other cars were around?
    (6) Religions tell us what to believe "with unquestioning faith" and, indeed, avoid and strongly discourage doubts and questions. Can you imagine a religion studying the psychological needs underlying the development of myths and religions?
    (7) The media encourages passive observation and glorifies persons in high authority. Independent thinking is hardly rewarded, e.g. there are 30 to 40 candidates for president every four years, but how many get a chance to share their ideas? Two, maybe three.
    (8) The military teaches, "Yours is not to wonder why, yours is but to do and die."
    (9) At work, the employees, even after 20 or 30 years, do not make decisions but wait on the bosses to tell them what to do. And finally,
    (10) our friends, in most cases, only remain friends so long as we agree with them on major issues. "To have friends, you have to get along." We are taught well to be submissive followers. To truly think on your own and to do your own thing can be very scary.

    The continuation of a society depends to some extent on compliance. Forty years ago, writers claimed that the pressure to conform was increasing. William Whyte (1956) in The Organization Man contended that "getting along with others" and team-work were replacing the Protestant Ethic of individual effort and hard work. David Riesman (1950) in The Lonely Crowd described three common ways we conform socially:
    (1) we are tradition-directed; that is, social customs and beliefs, especially in the form of social pressures, determine what we do.
    (2) We are conscience-directed; that is, we have internalized our parents' morals and ideals so that we are controlled not by our reason but by our sense of guilt.
    (3) We are other-directed; that is, we are sensitive to what our friends and associates think and feel and we try to please or impress them. Riesman saw America as becoming more and more other-directed. Certainly Milgram's subjects went to great lengths to please the experimenter.

    Harvey, Hunt, and Schroder (1961) found four types of people:
    (1) rule abiding, tell-me-what-to-do types (30%),
    (2) rebellious, don't-tell-me-what-to-do types (15%),
    (3) cautious, what-do-you-think-I-should-do types (20%), and
    (4) self-directed, I'll-get-enough-information-and-decide-for-myself-what-to-do-types (5-7%).

    It's shocking that so few fall in the last category (especially since most of us think of ourselves as independent). The more recent data (cited in introduction) provides some hope that we are gradually learning to think for ourselves.

    Social-emotional dependency

    If we are willing to seriously hurt someone to please an authority we will know for only an hour, one has to wonder how strong our dependency is on parents, friends, and loved ones. Harry Harlow (Harlow & Harlow, 1966) did an impressive series of studies demonstrating that baby monkeys need mothering. Unless the monkeys received some kind of love in the form of being held, stroked, and played with, they developed abnormally, i.e. they became scared, hostile, self-destructive, and sexually inept. Human infants also need loving care; they may die without it (see chapter 6). Bowlby (1969) found the infant's first attachment was to mother and then to others. These early needs and emotional bonds are powerful and possibly innate. Can it be that this same kind of desperate clinging dependency persists as adults?

    Takeo Doi (1973), a Japanese psychoanalyst, describes a unique Japanese word--amae--which refers to the longing of an infant at the breast to have every whim attended to, to be enveloped in indulgent love, to feel at one with the mother. Doi says such a feeling continues into adulthood. It is being so dependent and needy that one is very careful not to disrupt such a warm, giving relationship; thus, the Japanese are dutifully apologetic. It means being so close to another person that one can be self-indulgent without embarrassment. It means seeking unconditional love, love you receive just by existing (what Fromm called "Mother's love").

    The Japanese are more aware of these dependency needs, partly because they have the word (amae) and partly because their culture does not emphasize (as much as ours does) individual freedom and self-reliance. They are willing to stay close and subservient to their parents; they are inclined to become attached to the company they work for, giving conscientious work and expecting life-long support from the company.

    Our need to be accepted

    Otto Rank (1932), an early student of Freud, said it was important to assert one's own "will." He believed that most neuroses develop because people do not have the courage to be themselves; instead, they suppress their true selves in order to please others. Many others agree. Moustakas (1967) calls conformity a self-alienating process by which he means that we cut ourselves off from our own feelings, dreams, talents, and potential because we want to be liked. Other peoples' fears of being "different" cause them to reject us if we are "different" and unique. Thus, it is our fear of being rejected (by conformists), that causes us to lose our own freedom and independence.

    Fritz Perls wrote a popular poster which reflects our common struggle to get free of domination by others:

    "I do my thing, and you do your thing. I am not in this world to live up to your expectations and you are not in this world to live up to mine. You are you, and I am I, and if by chance we find each other, it's beautiful. If not, it can't be helped."

    From : http://mentalhelp.net/psyhelp/chap8/chap8c.htm

    JanG

  • Julie
    Julie

    Good post! I have often wondered about compliance even though I fully understand the need people have to "fit in".

    Personally I have long been a non-compliant sort of girl and though it wins me no friends in some quarters it has saved me from many a mistake, including joining the oh-so-controlling cult a.k.a. The Watchtower. I knew I could never join such an organization. I always thoroughly assess a rule before I decide whether or not I will adhere to it. I saw their rules as bullshit from a mile away, all thanks to my I'll-be-the-judge-of-whether-that-should-be-a-rule-for-me attitude.

    Remember, the favorite word of the non-conformist is "why". Use it freely.

    Julie

  • TR
    TR

    Thanks for posting that info, Jan. It helps.

    Julie,

    you sound just like my wife. She rejected the WTS when I joined. She never gave a second's thought to joining.

    TR

    "cults suck"

  • Jang
    Jang

    I have long been a non-compliant sort of girl and though it wins me no friends in some quarters it has saved me from many a mistake

    Glad to hear you leart it so early ..... I finally learnt this and you are right, it wins us no friends in
    some quarters ..... but it is us non-conformists who have changed the world .... eg. electricity,
    telephone, penicillan, and so on ......

    Good for you Julie!

    JanG

  • XJWBill
    XJWBill

    Jang, what a great summary of research findings! Very nice presentation. The Milgram study, in particular, makes fascinating reading--I have a book that contains the experimenters' full summary, and I recommend it to everyone who wants to understand the psychology of complying with authority.

    Of course, compliance or conformity might be bad or might be good--it all depends on the situation, don't you think? The example of traffic regulations comes to mind, or waiting one's turn at the cafeteria line.

    Being raised with a fine Texas sense of independence and thinking-for-yourself, I nevertheless agree with those old Greek boys who said that virtue is the mean between two extremes--the Golden Mean. Excessive kowtowing and excessive idiosyncracy are both bad. In fact the latter often turns into just another form of submission to the group--beatniks, hippies, punk rockers, and whatever-they-call-it-now all start out by glorifying "individuality" and end up all being depressingly alike, no?

    Seems to me the simple point of all those studies you quoted is that most folks just cannot resist social pressure. Driving to work the other day, I heard a tongue-in-cheek radio ad hawking some product, and the tag line was "people who are different get ridiculed." How true! And most folks just do not have the courage to face ridicule, real or imagined, or the courage to risk being unloved, unliked.

    One benefit of having been a JW, for me, was learning to have the courage to be different from the crowd--though I'm long since over the WTBTS, I still don't feel I HAVE to be just like everybody else when the issue is important to me. And that's a good feeling.

    Peace :-)

    Bill

    "If we all loved one another as much as we say we love God, I reckon there wouldn't be as much meanness in the world as there is."--from the movie Resurrection (1979)

  • Jang
    Jang

    Of course, compliance or conformity might be bad or might be good--it all depends on the situation, don't you think? The example of traffic regulations comes to mind, or waiting one's turn at the cafeteria line.

    But that is compliance with rules when it is traffic laws etc. Waiting one's turn at a cafeteria is
    being polite ..... but conforming so you wont be ridiculed such as going along with the crowd even
    when you know it is wrong is different. This is what the studies were showing.

    JanG

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