RC 99 Passage 37

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RC 99 Passage 37

by bubbliiiiiiii » Thu Jul 07, 2011 5:57 am
Guys, I am having trouble summarizing each paragraph of the passage.

I have read it several times and have tried to map the Official summary of the passage with passage but could not. :(

Can someone help me in understanding the summary of the passage?

Here is the question.


The person who, with inner conviction, loathes stealing, killing, and assault, may find himself performing these acts with relative ease when commanded by authority. Behaviour that is unthinkable in an individual who is acting of his own volition may be executed without hesitation when carried out under orders. An act carried out under command is, psychologically, of a profoundly different character than spontaneous action.

The important task, from the standpoint of a psychological study of obedience, is to be able to take conceptions of authority and translate them into personal experience. It is one thing to talk in abstract terms about the respective rights of the individual and of authority; it is quite another to examine a moral choice in a real situation. We all know about the philosophic problems of freedom and authority. But in every case where the problem is not merely academic there is a real person who must obey or disobey authority. All musing prior to this moment is mere speculation, and all acts of disobedience are characterized by such a moment of decisive action.

When we move to the laboratory, the problem narrows: if an experimenter tells a subject to act with increasing severity against another person, under what conditions will the subject comply, and under what conditions will he disobey? The laboratory problem is vivid, intense, and real. It is not something apart from life, but carries to an extreme and very logical conclusion certain trends inherent in the ordinary functioning of the social world. The question arises as to whether there is any connection between what we have studied in the laboratory and the forms of obedience we have so often deplored throughout history. The differences in the two situations are, of course, enormous, yet the difference in scale, numbers, and political context may be relatively unimportant as long as certain essential features are retained.

To the degree that an absence of compulsion is present, obedience is coloured by a cooperative mood; to the degree that the threat of force or punishment against the person is intimated, obedience is compelled by fear. The major problem for the individual is to recapture control of his own regnant processes once he has committed them to the purposes of others. The difficulty this entails represents the poignant and in some degree tragic element in the situation, for nothing is bleaker than the sight of a person striving yet not fully able to control his own behaviour in a situation of consequence to him.

The essence of obedience is the fact that a person comes to view himself as the instrument for carrying out another's wishes, and he therefore no longer regards himself as culpable for his actions. Once this critical shift of viewpoint has occurred, all of the essential features of obedience-the adjustment of thought, the freedom to engage in cruel behaviour, and the types of justification experienced by the person (essentially similar whether they occur in a psychological laboratory or on the battlefield)-follow. The question of generality, therefore, is not resolved by enumerating all of the manifest differences between the psychological laboratory and other situations, but by carefully constructing a situation that captures the essence of obedience-a situation in which a person gives himself over to authority and no longer views himself as the cause of his own actions.

1. According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT false?
A. People will never commit acts that they judge to be wrong.
B. People will always obey those who are in positions of authority over them.
C. Obedience is not an important subject because it affects only a very limited number of acts.
D. It is possible to study obedience through a laboratory experiment.
E. Obedience is not impacted by a cooperative mood

2. In the context of the points being made by the author in the passage, the phrase "•absence of compulsion"– (line 36) refers to:
A. the lack of punishment in psychological experiments.
B. obedience that is willingly given to one's superior.
C. the freedom to disobey the orders of those in authority.
D. one's ability to consider the moral implications of an act.
E. having the free will to do what one wants

3. Which of the following findings would serve to most WEAKEN the author's claim in the passage about obedience to authority?
A. A study that concludes that most obedience to authority is motivated by fear
B. A study that demonstrates that most authority figures in government behave immorally
C. A study that shows that most people do not have strongly held ethical values
D. A study that asserts that people with a college education are less likely to obey authority figures than those with only a high school education
E. A study that proves that fear is an overriding emotion for most human beings


OA: DBC

Official Summary of each passage as follows,

Topic and Scope - The psychological ramifications of obedience to authority versus control over one's one actions.
Mapping the Passage
¶1 states that people do things they otherwise wouldn't when so ordered by authority.
¶2 argues that psychological studies have to take into account the practical aspects of obedience in addition to theoretical ideas.
¶3 suggests that laboratory-tested obedience effectively highlights these practical aspects.
¶4 says that obedience is influenced by fear and the desire to cooperate, and that the individual obeying has trouble controlling his own behaviour.
¶5 expands on the point in ¶4: the laboratory can effectively simulate real-world conditions that lead to obedience.
Regards,

Pranay

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by gsinghal » Thu Jul 07, 2011 8:23 am
phewww... such a long passage.. completed in 9:34 mins

my take : DCC

I am still not convinced with the 2nd answer provided as B. Can Someone please explain.

Bubliiii, can you please provide the exp. given for second question.


Thanks
Gautam

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by pvnadept » Fri Jul 08, 2011 1:53 pm
The ans should be DBC.
@gsinghal : Reason : If a person is not compelled/intimidated, one willingly obeys superiors. There is no mention of one's defiance in such cases rather the person cooperates with his/her superiors.


@bubbliiii: Para 1 talks about someone who is against immoral acts but may be not so reluctant performing those acts himself if only under someone's orders.
Para 2 is about the different approaches to study obedience. While one may argue that abstract study takes everything into consideration, real life confrontations with morality are decided at the spur of the moment and hence, are different from mere theoretical speculations.
Para 3 talks about laboratory testings of the subjects. It points out the differences between the above said approaches in terms of scale, numbers and political contexts justifying the importance of real situations.
Para 4 classifies obedience into two kinds - Willing (cooperative) and intimidated (fearful). It talks about the loss of self-control and one's thought process as an effect of one's commitment to his/her superiors.
Para 5 mentions the essence of obedience and continues the description of a person's thoughts where one no longer views himself as the cause of his own actions. It talks of generalisation by construction of a situation that would capture the essence of obedience.

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Praveen

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by jonathan123456 » Sat Jul 09, 2011 9:50 am
tough one. took me 15 mins to complete (with questions) :cry: with IMO D,C,C[/img]

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by bubbliiiiiiii » Sun Jul 10, 2011 10:09 pm
Hey Praveen,

Great analysis.

I am unable to do that and mostly commit mistakes in RC section.

Can you share some tips/experiences that would help me improve in RC section?
Regards,

Pranay