Title: Military Applications
1Military Applications
2PY3 Ethical Issues Military
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- Is war wrong?
- Spend 5 minutes discussing with a couple of
friends whether you think war is wrong. - In all situations?
- Does it depend what is at stake?
- Should there be rules of engagement?
- Is this a question psychologists should be
concerned with?
3Power point objectives
- The purpose of this power point is to
- Introduce to you ideas about ethics and warfare
but particularly the involvement of psychologists
in warfare - Describe to you some studies that have been
undertaken regarding warfare - Help you discuss if these studies are reliable,
valid and ethical
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- What contribution has psychology made?
- Explaining warfare
- Participating in warfare/military objectives
- The effects of warfare
- Separate your notes into these sections
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- 1. EXPLAINING WARFARE
- war and peace seem to be part of the human
condition - for most of us it is acted out on TV and so
getting a grip on the reality of it is difficult
but for others it is very real - The media show us amusing or heroic stories but
it is neither - Most modern warfare is a combination of days of
boredom and short bursts of terrifying action - Warfare changes over time and has cultural
aspects to it.
6Watch clip
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- Is war is natural? Explaining Warfare.
- Evolutionary psychologists would agree that
aggression has survival value and an adaptive
purpose. - But this rarely includes death( Not so adaptive!)
- A range of ideas have been offered
Male competition (intra sexual selection)
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- William McDougall
- The instinct of pugnacity
- an eugenics enthusiast
- survival of fittest- removes the weak
- anthropological evidence- tribes in Borneo were
cited, those most aggressive had the best huts
and showed survival qualities such as bravery - The removal of war degeneration of society
- If there is no war societies need selective
breeding - This was the basis of the 1920/30s Nazi campaign
against Jews, homosexuals, gypsies, Catholics.. - Not really an idea we would subscribe to today
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Sigmund Freud
- In 1932 Freud started a correspondence with
Einstein in which he outlined his thinking about
warfare. ( As a Jew, Freud was exiled in London
during WW2,Einstein another Jew also had plenty
to say! ) - Freud said
- communities can overthrow tyrants
- communities can be aggressive to each other
- some wars good-establish large empires
- imposed order and peace
- persecute minorities/civil liberties
- league of nations/UN can play that role
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- Humans have 2 instincts
- Conserve and unify/destroy and kill
They can not suppress these instincts only divert
them into warfare People can be separated into
leaders and the led -need to educate the elite to
be more rational leaders and less emotional The
more rational- eventually the more pacifist
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- Bowlby (1938)
- aggression constant feature across time and
history-combination of evolutionary pressures and
psychodynamics - 4 causes
- Possession
- Frustration
- Arrival of strangers
- Attack of scapegoat
- What we witness are defence mechanisms-projection
- What the Nazis feared most in themselves they
projected onto the Jews. - But most nations peaceful most of the time
- Catharsis-forces build to a release of energy (
Freudian) - Thresholds- there are periods of gradual and
sudden change - ( evolutionary)
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- Mead
- anthropologist
- Claimed war is not an inevitable part of our
nature - It is an invented institution like marriage
- ( also to protect property)
- Eskimos (sic) are aggressive, even cannibalistic
but there is no war-there are also few or no
possessions or property. They are mostly nomadic. - Other nations could deal with conflict better
- There have been instances where conflict has been
settled without war e.g. end of cold war/iron
curtain/Cuban missile crisis
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- Summary
- What do you think about these ideas?
- Are they reliable?
- Based on scientific evidence?
- Are they valid?
- Do they add anything to our understanding of
warfare and human behaviour?
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- 2. USES OF PSYCHOLOGY IN WAR
- up to 1960s it was all about human resources
- mass IQ testing
- psychometric testing- matching skills to jobs
- staff welfare designing plane controls/sex ed for
soldiers
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- Use of animals
- Skinner trained pigeons to navigate missiles
during WW2 - They learnt to discriminate ships
- never used as too unreliable
- Sea gulls were also trained to detect submarines
- classical conditioning was used to shape their
behaviour - dogs and dolphins were trained during WW2 using
psychological techniques to carry bombs and
search danger zones - dogs are used today like sniffer dogs to search
dangerous buildings ( a dogs life is considered
less valuable than a soldiers)
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- After 1960s
- change of direction- power of psychology realised
by military. - think Guantanamo Bay and rendition!
- change of direction-psy ops used to fight
guerrilla fighters, terrorists - Interested in the effects of captivity
interrogation techniques and brain washing - It is all very secret! Most info comes out of USA
but by no means the only country using psy ops or
the worst country - Watson (1980) - reviewed 7,500 studies
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- Japanese prisoners of war study
- Japanese not prepared for numbers so guards left
to develop own strategies/control - POWs were crowded,dirty,there was no food and
they were worked until died - torture was common- beatings/stand in sun/pull
out nails/prop eyelids open in sun - Afterwards former POWs showed a lack of emotional
response, were depressed, and had impaired memory
and poor concentration - A study of the effects of captivity, of physical
hardship/brutality. - Interesting for psychologists from both points of
view- the guards and the prisoners.
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- Zimbardo (1970) Stanford Prison Study
- Linked to brutality of Japanese guards in WW2-not
civilian prisons - Prison simulation/ abandoned
- funded by US navy
- surprise arrest like POW/hostage
- Depersonalisation-hoods
- creativity of guards
- numbers not names (POW)
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- Interrogation
- in some armies military offence to collaborate-
not going to tell the enemy their secrets! - torture not that effective
- Soldiers trained to withstand pain and die before
they divulge anything - Military now more interested in psychological
techniques
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- Sensory Deprivation -Hebb study
- Most Ps lasted 2 days one lasted 5 days
- Very stressful
- Experienced sensory distortions
- Watson 1980- studied USA and Canadian armys use
of SD - hallucinations
- cant tell if awake
- when released overwhelmed and rather talkative
and susceptible to propaganda!
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- Sensory Disorientation
- Used by British army in NI described by Shallice
(1973) - Victims suffered disorientation
through-torture/sleep deprivation/drugs/hunger
and sensory deprivation - They were questioned/hooded/had to listen to loud
white noise/stand for 16 hours/had beatings/were
sleep deprived/and little food. - Devastating effect on humans
- Research is used to help prepare soldiers/get
enemies to talk-what if info saves lives?
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- Write down your thoughts so far on this topic.
- How should psychologists be involved in warfare?
- Are psychological explanations of warfare
meaningful and useful? - What ethical issues are there with psychologists
involvement in war?
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- Brain washing
- Korean war 1950s
- 7,000 US POWs- about 1/3 collaborated and made
propaganda films for Koreans - Harsh prison conditions- indoctrination sessions
- Many Americans died but none of Turkish did
- Why was this? Interesting to psychologists
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- Dr Vincent Example of brainwashing
- French doctor working in China
- Arrested and taken to a Chinese Communist Party
re education centre - Lifton (1960) descriptive study
- 3 year programme of brainwashing or
re-education?? Depends on your view! - Arrest
- Depersonalisation
- Struggle
- Leniency
- Loss of control
- Study
- Change
- Has modern application in training of terrorists
in UK.
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- Propaganda
- Research into the process is difficult as hard to
detect- the best propaganda is undetectable - Includes mild distortions of already held views
and persuasive stories. Psychological processes
are important here such as perception, attention
and attribution. - Conducting cultural analysis- makes it more
powerful -hit right buttons. Often psychologists
do this in anthropological studies. - Power lies in control of media-e.g.. Gulf War
Hometown News Programme - The USA in Iraq avoid estimates of Iraqi
casualties - Nazis and Jews- Jews were to blame for Germanys
economic problems - British propaganda Germans ate babies, boiled
enemies for soap, raped women
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- Psychological processes in propaganda
- - Yale study group
- Learning theory
- Sleeper effect
- Selective attention
- Principles of persuasion
Advertising is propaganda!
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- psy ops
- US operations in Vietnam studied
- Was used against Vietnamese people
- encouraged defection in Vietnamese army
- over 7million leaflets/156000 posters/month 2000
hours of broadcasting - stories of defected fighters
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Obtaining cultural info to influence
Vietnamese e.g. targeted grieving practices
49/100 days after major battles research into
cultural differences in disgust and smell stink
bombs were used to flush out guerrillas -smell
of cooking fat- Burma Gave away toothbrushes and
toilets-win Hearts and Minds of the people It
has been rumoured that Barney the Dinosaur music
was blasted at internees at Guantanamo Bay
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- 3. EFFECTS OF WAR
- Report on nuclear war BPS (1985)
- Used to plan civil defence
- One area of interest is Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder or what used to be called Shell Shock - -3 parts
- Re experiencing/avoidance or numbing/increased
arousal - Delayed, cyclic even 50 yrs later-study WW2 vets
Hunt (1997) - Not just soldiers but civilians
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- Summary- some questions to think about
- Not enough in the exam to describe this/need to
discuss issues and processes - Questions likely to ask about ethical issues of
use of psychology in warfare - Moral justification of war is not really a
psychological issue - Uses of science in war to expedite/mediate the
effects are ethical issues discussed by
psychologists - Questions will ask you for two real life
applications so this material will be worth 7.5
marks or 250 words. - The other application we will look at is the
media.
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- Should psychologists promote peace or help humans
deal with war better and may be shorten the
length of it? - American Psychological Association has branch of
military psychology is this a good thing? - Military research attracts funding. Can lead to
progresses in scientific endeavour/knowledge? - Helps soldiers work conditions?
- Cultural sensitivity itself is good- use of it
isn't- can you separate the research from its
future use? - Is any research likely to be reliable given the
arena in which it is carried out? - Complete a mind map of your thinking on these
questions and the ethical issues of using
psychology in warfare.
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- References
- Google for images
- Banyard P and Flanagan C,2005 Ethical Issues and
Guidelines in Psychology. Routledge p89-96 - Banyard P, 1999 Controversies in Psychology.
Routledge p11-29