Disobedience

In the 1960s, psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted his infamous shock experiments. Participants were told to administer what they believed were painful, dangerous electric shocks to another person simply because an authority figure in a lab coat told them to. The results were chilling: 65% of ordinary people went all the way to the maximum voltage.

But history does not remember the obedient. It remembers the ones who broke the rules for the right reasons. Disobedience

Philosopher Henry David Thoreau, who coined the term "civil disobedience," argued that there is a higher law than the legislature: conscience. When a law is in direct conflict with one’s moral duty to humanity, the moral duty wins. In the 1960s, psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted his