Authoritarian Personality Disposition and Obedience
The authoritarian personality describes individuals who rigidly obey authority figures while showing contempt for those they consider inferior. Adorno studied over 2,000 white middle-class Americans to investigate this personality type and developed the F-scale (fascism scale) to measure these tendencies.
People with authoritarian personalities typically display several key characteristics they're highly obedient to authority, show contempt toward "inferior" people, hold controversial attitudes, think inflexibly, and embrace traditional values. According to Adorno, these traits develop during childhood from harsh parenting with strict discipline and conditional love, creating resentment that gets displaced onto weaker groups.
Adorno's findings revealed that those scoring high on the F-scale identified strongly with powerful figures, were highly status-conscious, and held fixed stereotypes about other groups. Importantly, researchers found strong correlations between authoritarianism and prejudice, suggesting these personality traits may predict discriminatory behavior.
Remember this! While the theory helps explain individual differences in obedience, it struggles to explain widespread obedience in populations like pre-war Germany, where diverse personalities still demonstrated similar obedient behaviors.
The theory has both strengths and limitations. Milgram found supporting evidence linking obedience with high F-scale scores. However, critics note the theory shows correlation rather than causation, exhibits political bias by focusing on right-wing ideology, and doesn't comprehensively explain obedience across the political spectrum. These limitations suggest social identity theory may offer better explanations for widespread obedience in certain contexts.