Do people who are genuine dissenters predict that more people will dissent than people who genuinely conform?
Genuine dissenters generally predict that most people will conform, largely because it’s a lot easier to notice people conforming when you disagree with the thing they’re conforming to.
Also, a dissenter in one area (religion, for example) might be a conformer in another. I think it’s worth looking at whether someone who actively protests racial discrimination (in a non-conforming way, so maybe someone from the early civil rights movement) would dissent in Asch’s experiment. Does willingness to dissent in one area of your life transfer over to a larger willingness to dissent in other areas of your life?
Genuine dissenters generally predict that most people will conform, largely because it’s a lot easier to notice people conforming when you disagree with the thing they’re conforming to.
Is there any evidence to support this in general?
Also, a dissenter in one area (religion, for example) might be a conformer in another. I think it’s worth looking at whether someone who actively protests racial discrimination (in a non-conforming way, so maybe someone from the early civil rights movement) would dissent in Asch’s experiment. Does willingness to dissent in one area of your life transfer over to a larger willingness to dissent in other areas of your life?