Behind the Shock Machine

BOOK: Behind the Shock Machine
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BEHIND THE
SHOCK MACHINE

BEHIND THE
SHOOK MACHINE

The Untold Story of the Notorious
Milgram Psychology Experiments

GINA PERRY

NEW YORK
LONDON

Copyright © 2012, 2013 by Gina Perry

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher.

Requests for permission to reproduce selections from this book should be mailed to: Permissions Department, The New Press, 38 Greene Street, New York, NY 10013.

First published in Australia by Scribe, Brunswick, 2012

This revised edition published in the United States by The New Press, New York, 2013

Distributed by Perseus Distribution

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Perry, Gina.

Behind the shock machine : the untold story of the notorious Milgram psychology experiments / Gina Perry. -- Revised edition.

pages cm

Includes bibliographical references.

ISBN 978-1-59558-925-5 (e-book)  1.  Milgram, Stanley. 2. Interpersonal relations. 3.  Social psychology--Experiments--History. 4.  Behaviorism (Psychology)--Moral and ethical aspects. 5.  Human experimentation in psychology--Moral and ethical aspects. 6.  Psychology--Research--Effect of experimenters on. 7.  Obedience--Psychological aspects. I. Title.

HM132.P4185 2013

302--dc23

2013014976

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CONTENTS

Note to Readers

Timeline of the Obedience Experiments

Prologue

Introduction

1. The Man Behind the Mirror

2. Going All the Way

3. The Limits of Debriefing

4. Subjects as Objects

5. Disobedience

6. The Secret Experiments

7. Milgram’s Staff

8. In Search of a Theory

9. The Ethical Controversy

10. Milgram’s Book

11. Representing Obedience

Conclusion

Appendix: List of Conditions

Acknowledgments

Notes

Additional Sources

NOTE TO READERS

Before we start this journey, a few words about language, use of names, and privacy. You’ll notice that I refer to some people in this book by their first names and others by their surnames, and some not by name at all but by number. Let me explain. With their permission, I have used the real names—except where a pseudonym was requested—of those I interviewed. I’ve referred to them by their first names because “Mr. Menold” or “Mrs. Bergman” didn’t feel apt, given they shared their intimate experiences with me. But where I’ve quoted from conversations that took place during the obedience experiments—which Milgram recorded on audiotape—I’ve had to refer to people by their subject number or make up a name to help you picture them more accurately. These recordings are classified until 2039, so they have been sanitized, meaning that the names of subjects have been removed before being made available. At the time of my research, 140 recordings had been made available, each of them around fifty minutes long. I spent over two hundred hours listening to and transcribing them, from which I have quoted selectively.

I refer to people I didn’t meet, such as Milgram and his staff, by their surnames, as that’s how they were named in the transcripts, reports, and research documents I read. In a sense, they’re the titles by which I’ve come to know them, and it would feel like an uninvited intimacy to refer to them otherwise (even if they’re no longer around to call me on it).

I struggled with how to describe the people who took part in the
experiments. Were they subjects? Volunteers? Participants? Each suggests something different about the power relationship between the researcher and the researched. The term “volunteers” was misleading: they did not volunteer for the experiment they found themselves in, but for a benign-sounding memory test. And while I preferred the term “participant,” it reflects a more contemporary attitude than Milgram held. Despite my discomfort with the term “subject,” with its connotations of passivity and people-as-objects, it does more accurately reflect the attitude implicit in Milgram’s relationship to the people he studied and is a reminder to readers of the times. In the end, I used all three.

I have also quoted from Milgram’s records of conversations between himself and psychiatrist Dr. Paul Errera and from the post-experiment sessions that Errera conducted for the subjects. These records have been transcribed from Milgram’s audio recordings.

Lastly, when I’ve quoted from Milgram’s original documents, I’ve retained any misspellings or careless expression in order to capture his mood or give an insight into his state of mind at the time of writing. I’ve shown others this same courtesy.

TIMELINE OF THE OBEDIENCE EXPERIMENTS

1960
    Between September and October, Stanley Milgram and a group of his students begin a project on what will become the obedience experiments.

1961
    From January to August, Milgram makes preparations for the obedience experiments. In August, they begin. Between August and November:

•  Joe Dimow is in condition 2.
•  Bill Menold is in condition 5 or 6.
•  Herb Winer is in condition 5 or 6.
•  Bob Lee is in condition 9. (See
appendix
for a full list of the conditions.)

1962
    From January to May, the obedience experiments continue. Between March and May:

•  Hannah Bergman is in condition 20.
•  Bernardo Vittori and Enzo Cerrato are in condition 24.
Milgram shoots his documentary
Obedience
during the last three days of the experiments, in May. Fred Prozi is one of the subjects filmed during this time. In July, Milgram sends out a questionnaire to all subjects.

1963
    Between February and May, Dr. Paul Errera conducts interviews with selected subjects. In October, Milgram’s first article about the obedience research is published, causing a media storm.

1964
    In June, Diana Baumrind’s controversial response to Milgram’s article is published, sparking widespread debate about the ethics of the experiment.

1974
    Milgram’s long-awaited book
Obedience to Authority
is published, stirring controversy that continues to the present day.

PROLOGUE

It’s summer 1961, and Fred Prozi is walking to the basement lab of one of Yale’s neo-Gothic buildings for his appointment. Anyone who sees him would know that he doesn’t belong, not just because his broad shoulders, crew cut, and T-shirt give him away as a blue-collar worker but also because of the way he is looking around at the buildings—squinting up at the mullioned windows that glint in the late-afternoon sun, and then down at the map in his hands.

Fred is like many of the 780 people who’ve come to Yale to take part in an experiment about memory and learning. He has volunteered as much for curiosity as for the $4.50, although that will come in handy.

He passes under the archway, with its ornamental clock that chimes the hour. Reaching Linsly-Chittenden Hall, he goes down the steps and into the basement. There’s another fellow waiting there, only he’s older than Fred. He’s wearing horn-rimmed glasses and a suit, a hat perched on his knee.

A scientist in a lab coat comes out of a room and introduces himself to the men. He is Mr. Williams.

“Let me out!”

Fred spins around in his chair to face Mr. Williams. A thin wall separates them from the man strapped to a chair in the next room.

“Let me out of here. That’s it—let me out of here. My heart’s starting to bother me now. Let me out of here, please!”

Williams nods at Fred, indicating that he should keep going. His voice is impassive, and he speaks rapidly, with commanding authority. “Continue, please.”

“He refuses to go on.”

“The experiment requires that you continue, teacher. Please continue. The next word is ‘sad.’”

“You want me to keep going?” Fred looks at him uncomprehendingly.

“Continue, please.”

Fred grimaces and turns back to the list of words and the machine. “Sad: face, music, clown, girl.” The light box on top of the machine has the numbers one to four on it. The correct number lights up. “Correct! The next one’s ‘short.’ Short: sentence, movie, skirt, time. Answer, please.” The number two lights up, and Fred stares at it and shakes his head. “Wrong; 165 volts,” he says. He presses down a switch, which buzzes loudly.

“Let me out!”

“That guy’s hollering in there.” Fred looks expectantly at Williams.

“Continue, please. Go on.”

Fred does a double take.

“He’s got a heart condition there. You want me to go on?”

‘Just continue, please.”

Fred takes a deep breath. “Shh-sharp: ax, needle, stick, blade. Answer, please.” The man’s answer flashes. “Wrong.” He scratches his head, then turns to Williams. “I’m up to 180 volts.”

“Please continue, teacher.”

Fred rubs his hand over his face, and says dully, “‘Needle.’ You’re gonna get another shock. One hundred and eighty volts.”

Over the buzz of the machine, the man cries out, “Ow! I can’t stand the pain. Let me out of here!”

Fred swivels around. “He can’t stand the pain. I’m not gonna kill that man in there. You hear him hollering.”

“As I said before, the shocks may be painful, but they’re not dangerous.”

“But he’s hollering. He can’t stand it. What if something happens to him?” Fred’s voice is anguished.

“The experiment requires that you continue, teacher.”

Fred laughs unhappily, shakes his head. “I’m not going to get that man sick in there. He’s hollering in there.”

“Whether the learner likes it or not, we must go on until the learner has learned all the word pairs correctly.”

“I refuse to take responsibility for him getting hurt in there. He’s in there hollering.”

“It’s absolutely essential that you continue, teacher.”

Fred points at the paper. “There’s too many left here, there’s too many of them left!” He runs his hands through his hair, rubs his eyes with the heel of his hand. “I mean, who’s gonna take responsibility if anything happens to that gentleman?”

“I’m responsible for anything that happens. Continue, please.”

Fred turns slowly back to the machine, drops his head in his hands. “Alright. The next one: ‘slow.’” He pauses before continuing. “Walk, dance, truck, music. Answer, please.”

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