Disobedience To Authority
Little Tommy is at the park having a picnic with his new babysitter Kenzie. They are having a good time, laughing, eating, and playing games. Tommy is becoming fond of Kenzie, and has even began to trust her. They get done eating and Kenzie tells Tommy to leave the trash on the ground. Tommy is only six years old, but he has been taught a good set of morals and knows he is supposed to obey her because she is in charge of him, he also knows he should throw the trash away. Tommy is just a kid and is facing a hard decision many people face in life, whether to obey authority or do what is right. Generally speaking, it is important to obey, but in some cases to disobey is more important. In my opinion, disobedience to authority is more important...show more content...Erich Fromm, a psychoanalyst, philosopher, sociologist, historian, and a well known writer, wrote Disobedience as a Psychological and Moral Problem, and in it he states that Obedience to a person, institution, or power (heteronomous obedience) is submission; it implies the abdication of my autonomy and the acceptance of a foreign will or judgement in place of my own. If someone is to obey the orders of another person or power, they can potentially lose their own values or morals. Likewise, Jonah Lehrer, an experimentalist and journalist on psychology and neuroscience that studies the actions and mindsets of those who are in the position of authority, mentions that The same flawed thought processes triggered by authority also distort our ability to evaluate information and make complex decisions (Lehrer 647). Obedience can take over the mind and not allow for one s mind to form their own thoughts and opinions. It is similar to the way slavery worked, some of the slaves were obedient all their lives, and did not realize that they had the right to their own opinions and bodies, they did not realize they could be there own person. When people constantly obey, they lose the ability to be their own
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TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
Disobedience To Authority
1. Disobedience To Authority
Little Tommy is at the park having a picnic with his new babysitter Kenzie. They are having a good time, laughing, eating, and playing games.
Tommy is becoming fond of Kenzie, and has even began to trust her. They get done eating and Kenzie tells Tommy to leave the trash on the
ground. Tommy is only six years old, but he has been taught a good set of morals and knows he is supposed to obey her because she is in
charge of him, he also knows he should throw the trash away. Tommy is just a kid and is facing a hard decision many people face in life,
whether to obey authority or do what is right. Generally speaking, it is important to obey, but in some cases to disobey is more important. In my
opinion, disobedience to authority is more important...show more content...
Erich Fromm, a psychoanalyst, philosopher, sociologist, historian, and a well known writer, wrote "Disobedience as a Psychological and
Moral Problem," and in it he states that "Obedience to a person, institution, or power (heteronomous obedience) is submission; it implies the
abdication of my autonomy and the acceptance of a foreign will or judgement in place of my own." If someone is to obey the orders of
another person or power, they can potentially lose their own values or morals. Likewise, Jonah Lehrer, an experimentalist and journalist on
psychology and neuroscience that studies the actions and mindsets of those who are in the position of authority, mentions that "The same
flawed thought processes triggered by authority also distort our ability to evaluate information and make complex decisions" (Lehrer 647).
Obedience can take over the mind and not allow for one's mind to form their own thoughts and opinions. It is similar to the way slavery
worked, some of the slaves were obedient all their lives, and did not realize that they had the right to their own opinions and bodies, they did not
realize they could be there own person. When people constantly obey, they lose the ability to be their own
Get more content on HelpWriting.net