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Just Following Orders

Just Following Orders

Just Following Orders

Atrocities and the Brain Science of Obedience
Author:
Emilie A. Caspar, Universiteit Gent, Belgium
Published:
September 2024
Availability:
Available
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9781009385435

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    How can obedience and carrying out orders lead to horrific acts such as the Holocaust or the genocides in Rwanda, Cambodia, or Bosnia? For the most part, it is a mystery why obeying instructions from an authority can convince people to kill other human beings, sometimes without hesitation and with incredible cruelty. Combining social and cognitive neuroscience with real-life accounts from genocide perpetrators, this book sheds light on the process through which obedience influences cognition and behavior. Emilie Caspar, a leading expert in the field, translates this neuroscientific approach into a clear, uncomplicated explanation, even for those with no background in psychology or neuroscience. By better understanding humanity's propensity for direct orders to short-circuit our own independent decision-making, we can edge closer to effective prevention processes.

    • Presents the first complete and interdisciplinary view on the mechanisms of obedience
    • Combines lab research with field work and interviews with genocide perpetrators
    • Translates rigorous research into an easy-to-understand explanation of atrocious acts from a human-centred perspective

    Reviews & endorsements

    'The reason sentient human beings are able to commit atrocities they recognise as such is that direct orders circumvent individual decision-making. This mental quirk, says the neuroscientist Emilie A Caspar, is why genocide - from the Holocaust to Rwanda - happens. Her book is a lucid study of the 'brain science' of obedience and its consequences.' New Statesman

    ‘Emilie Caspar’s book resurrects Milgram’s agentic shift theory of obedience. Combining the results of laboratory studies with interviews with participants in the mass killings in Cambodia in the 1970s and Rwanda in 1994, Caspar argues that we should believe perpetrators who say they were just following orders. Her interviewees often explain themselves with versions of this claim. Participants in her new shock-giving obedience experiments often say the same. And brain recordings from these participants - based on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies - show different patterns for ordered and for free choice shock giving - suggesting that participants are in a different state when acting under orders.’ Clark McCauley, Lawfare

    Product details

    • Published: September 2024
    • Format: Hardback
    • ISBN: 9781009385435
    • Length: 261 pages
    • Dimensions: 236 × 160 × 19 mm
    • Weight: 0.493kg
    • Availability: Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: understanding genocide as a means to prevention
    • 1. Listening to the perpetrators of genocide
    • 2. A brief history of the experimental research on obedience
    • 3. How do we take ownership and responsibility over our own actions?
    • 4. Moral emotions under obedience
    • 5. Just giving orders? In the brain of those who command
    • 6. Desolation is everywhere
    • 7. Conclusion: How ordinary people stand up against immorality
    • Epilogue: A hopeful horizon.

    Author

    Emilie A. Caspar , Universiteit Gent, Belgium

    Emilie A. Caspar is a Professor at Ghent University, Belgium, specializing in social and cognitive neuroscience. She is one of the few neuroscientists worldwide working on the topic of obedience and she has received many awards for her research, which combines neuroscience with field interviews involving former genocide perpetrators.