ON June 18, 1961, a half-page ad appeared in a daily newspaper in New Haven, Connecticut. "We will pay you $4.00 for an hour of your time," read its headline. Conducted at Yale University, the "scientific study of memory and learning" required 500 men. The ad's bottom section contained a disclosure form, comprising an applicant's personal and professional details, addressed to professor Stanley Milgram. Hinged on a deceit-the study tested not "memory and learning" but obedience to authority-it sought to unravel the genocide's psychology: "Could it be that [Adolf] Eichmann and his million accomplices were just following orders?" wondered Milgram. "Could we call them all accomplices?"
Inspired by the trial of Holocaust perpetrator Eichmann-who, according to historian and philosopher Hannah Arendt, didn't resemble a vicious anti-Semite as much as a numb bureaucrat, someone embodying the "banality of evil"-Milgram began his experiment. It involved three participants: an Experimenter, a Teacher, and a Learner. The Experimenter controlled and administered the test. The Teacher, who had responded to the ad, delivered electric shocks to the Learner when he gave wrong answers to the word-pair questions. The Learner, however, an actor and a confederate sitting across a thin wall, received no shocks-his crying and pleading came from pre-recorded audio-a fact not known to the Teacher (the Subject). Every wrong answer demanded an incremental shock of 15 volts, ending in 450 volts, a lethal dose. As the jolts intensified, the Learner begged and sobbed and screamed. At 300 volts, he kicked the wall and stayed silent-forever.
Bu hikaye Outlook dergisinin December 11,2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Outlook dergisinin December 11,2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
No Singular Self
Sudarshan Shetty's work questions the singularity of identity
Mass Killing
Genocide or not, stop the massacre of Palestinians
Passing on the Gavel
The higher judiciary must locate its own charter in the Constitution. There should not be any ambiguity
India Reads Korea
Books, comics and webtoons by Korean writers and creators-Indian enthusiasts welcome them all
The K-kraze
A chronology of how the Korean cultural wave(s) managed to sweep global audiences
Tapping Everyday Intimacies
Korean filmmaker Hong Sang-soo departs from his outsized national cinema with low-budget, chatty dramedies
Tooth and Nail
The influence of Korean cinema on Bollywood aesthetics isn't matched by engagement with its deeper themes as scene after scene of seemingly vacuous violence testify, shorn of their original context
Beyond Enemy Lines
The recent crop of films on North-South Korea relations reflects a deep-seated yearning for the reunification of Korea
Ramyeon Mogole?
How the Korean aesthetic took over the Indian market and mindspace
Old Ties, Modern Dreams
K-culture in Tamil Nadu is a very serious pursuit for many