This week’s key idea is authority—and the often-missed distinction between authority that is legitimate and authority that is merely power wearing a badge. We tend to obey authority to save time, reduce uncertainty, and keep systems functioning. Most of the time, that’s not only reasonable—it’s necessary. But history, psychology, and political philosophy all show the same warning sign: when authority detaches from truth, accountability, or clear limits, obedience can continue even as judgment quietly steps aside. This week explores why that happens, how it happens, and why “just following orders” has never been a sufficient moral defense.
»Column Archive
THIS ISSUE: Authority.
Last updated 3 months ago.
Column Archives
THIS ISSUE: Authority.
TST Column
11 Feb 2026
TST Column
Feb 2026
Authority works by design. Human morality fails when obedience replaces accountability.
AUDIO
Listen to the column, or the research behind it.
Understanding MAGA
Thread
Column 4 of 7 in the Understanding MAGA series.
Using science to decode the invisible forces that shape political identity.
Column Research
Stories: Science Philosophy Critical Thinking History Big Bang Metaphysics Evolution Biases Futurism Ancient History Ethics Reasoning
1 Essay + 6 Tidbits
1 Focus
Plus a bonus deep-dive article.
This Issue:
— Authority —
Authority is legitimate power. It enables obedience through trust with no need for coercion.
Greetings!
–Michael Alan Prestwood
6 Research Tidbits
Wisdom Builder Crossroads
The research, stories, and questions that inform this issue.
1 Story »
Max Weber (1864–1920)
Born 1864.
Lived from 1864 to 1920, aged 56 years.
His core idea is that authority depends on perceived legitimacy, not moral agreement.
2 Quote »
Power is the ability to carry out one’s will despite resistance.
- Max Weber
- 1922, posthumously, edited by Marianne Weber
Power compels by force and coercian; legitimate authority has no need for either.
3 Science »
What is Deception Research?
Deception research shows that authority-driven situations often override personal judgment, replacing morality with obedience.
4Philosophy »
Why do good people obey illegal and immoral commands?
Blind obedience works by shifting ownership of morality to the boss.
5Critical Thinking »
Why do we rely on authority figures for information?
Authority is a cognitive shortcut for managing complexity. Choose your authorities carefully, and never stop auditing them.
6History!
What does history teach us about authoritarian rule?
History shows that authoritarian rule emerges less from cruel leaders than from systems that normalize obedience and discourage independent judgment.
Take the deep dive.
Linked Article
Critical Thinking
Article
Appeal to Authority Logical Fallacy
Authority
Authorities are useful shortcuts for navigating complex information, but they are not evidence. The appeal to authority fallacy occurs when a claim is treated as true simply because an expert or institution said it. Good reasoning requires evidence.