Stanley Milgram Experiment Essay

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    goodness and mortality one possesses. In an experiment to explore the humans tendency toward obedience, one person (the subject) is put to the test and faced with a significant question, stop hurting the man who is crying out in pain, or obey the instructor and participate in the actions being brought forward? Three people participate in this experiment, two of which are actors, and one a subject who does not know the secret behind the experiment. In this experiment the actor who acts as an…

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    Like Lord of the Flies, the experiment presented set rules and morals that stated how an individual should act towards one another, causing not only the guards, but the prisoners to fall into internal decadence. Through the sickening experience, the power the “guards” had most definitely got into their heads. “The Stanford Prison Experiment degenerated very quickly and the evil and inhuman side of human nature became apparent very quickly.” Also proven in the experiment is that the environment…

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment was an experiment based on the roles of people, and how easily people will fall into those roles. The prisoners were stuck in the basement all day for 6 days, and both the guards and prisoners lost their morals and individuality. The act of dehumanization also provided the prisoners with fear, anger, and helplessness. The Stanford Prison Experiment was not a physical genocide, but a psychological genocide. Genocide is the “intent to destroy, in whole or in part,…

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    The Stanford Prison experiment was not a physical genocide, but a psychological genocide. The prisoners were stuck in the basement all day for 6 days, and both the guards and prisoners lost their morals and individuality. The act of dehumanization also provided the prisoners with fear, anger, and helplessness. Philip Zimbardo was a psychology professor at the University of Stanford. He wanted to operate an experiment that would show how people act in adverse conditions, and the psychological…

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    Throughout the books The Lucifer Effect and Inside, there is a substantial focus on the state of incarnation, along with narrative accounts that detail the effects of prison. There is a common theme in both of the books that identifies the harmful nature of the prison system, and expounds how a prison can negatively affect the psychological well-being of a prisoner. As detailed by the authors, Zimbardo and Santos, the prison system damages the mental and emotional well-being of the prisoners,…

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    In social psychology, social influence is a major topic that examines how different social groups influence a person’s thoughts, feelings, and actions. There are three aspects of social influence, which includes conformity, compliance, and obedience. These three aspects of social influence are important for a society and are beneficial for our own success in life. Conformity involves changing of attitudes, behaviors, and beliefs based on surroundings. It is the change that we see in behavior…

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    The experiment is known as the Stanford prison experiment, Zimbardo had an ad for participants, informing them of the roles and the pay. The experiment was to last 14 days, and it included two groups, group A was guards and groups B were the prisoners, all volunteers were screened and checked for any mental or physical issues that may interfere with the results of the experiment. The guards were given rules; they were not allowed to physically…

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    The Stanford prison experiment was similar to the Milgram experiment because they both focused on the responses of people when there are underneath authority. Zimbardo was interested in what would happen when you would put good people in an evil place. He also focused on if the situation out of the institution can control your behavior or would your attitude and values overcome the situation from the negative environment. For Zimbardo negative environment, he had created a mock prison in the…

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    layout of Milgram’s obedience study we went over during a lecture also could help explain what we now think evil is. In This study Milgram tested the obedience of people to see how far they would go on inflicting pain on someone else because someone of authority told them too, which made people wonder if obedience inferred evil.We also went over he Stanford prison experiment in the lecture and many of us wanted to know what made the students, who were playing guards, act so cruel to the other…

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    caused by “the anxiety and helplessness” of their living conditions in Iraq (76). In attempt to investigate the motives behind sadistic acts in situations similar to the Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal, Philip G. Zimbardo, author of “The Stanford Prison Experiment,” held a study in which twenty-one “normal-average” male college students were brought to a “mock prison” to observe the influences of imprisonment on psychological behavior (Zimbardo 107-108). The analysis was originally designed to last…

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