Milgram Experiment Research Paper

Improved Essays
In the Milgram experiment, shock testing was the objective of the experiment. The controlled variable was an actor pretending that the shocks actually hurt him with shrieks of pain and terror from his vocals. However, it was all a set up to examine what a normal obedient human being reaction is when he or she is responsible for causing someone pain, that he or she did not know. Also, there was a more in-depth reason for the experiment. What govern the experiment to begin with is the desire for knowledge from Stanley Milgram passionate interest in why the Germens followed Hitler’s every command. Doctor Milgram was seeking information about how could numerous individuals follow such a corrupt leader and be kosher with the ethical sense of no compassion and commit horrible acts. In addition, one …show more content…
When a human being is programmed to such a perspective it is hard for most of us to change our patterns. After all, we judge our decisions from experiences and from consequences in order to remain a rational person and to appropriately function within society. Without law in order, without instilling fear in a humans, there is no control, thus we would run around as barbaric animals. Doctor Milgram was a brilliant and controversial theorist and was quite aware of those facts listed above. However, he could not fathom such cruelty, without an explanation. As his research continued he discovered that Hitler and his brigade were simply psychopaths and it is a logical and reasonable respond to the thousands of deaths that surface from his reign of power. However, even after one has been diagnosed of such mental disease it is still highly considered immoral and unethical, because Hitler started out as psychopath, but not all of his staff did. They became obedient to his commands and orders without hesitation, because of his social status of

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    The Milgram Obedience Experiment, a series of experiments originating from July 1961, serves as one of the most significant and influential experiments done in history due to its investigation of the conflict between obligation and obedience to authority and personal morality. The experiment was conducted by Stanley Milgram, an American social psychologist that primarily explored social behavior but is best known for the way he tackled the issue of the true power and influence of figures in authority after the Holocaust. Due to the shock of many at the discovery that human beings were capable of such horrible things during the Jewish genocide of World War II, the Milgram Experiment was conducted to identify exactly how the horrible acts of…

    • 1464 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Diana Baurind Experiment Analysis

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages
    • 4 Works Cited

    He points out that Milgram’s results were not published or well-known until he established the connection between the Holocaust and his experiment. It is evident that Parker believes Milgram does this simply to gain popularity for his…

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages
    • 4 Works Cited
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Stanley Milgram, a Yale University psychologist, shares his results from an experiment he conducted in regards to obedience of authority in 1963 in, “The Perils of Obedience.” His experiment illustrated that when put under particular circumstances, ordinary citizens have the capability to perform terrible and unexpected actions (Milgram 85). Milgram rationalizes these proceedings through the conclusion that the average individual will decide to please the experimenter rather than resist his authority to protect the wellbeing of the learner (Milgram 86). Diana Baumrind, a psychologist who worked at the Institute of Human Development at the University of California, writes in response to Milgram’s experiment “Review of Stanley Milgram’s Experiments…

    • 1334 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Dr. Guerin, we recently had an assignment over the Milgram Experiment. I remember the whole situation with the prank caller pretending to be a cop at a McDonalds. Recently a prank caller called several business and had them break the windows out. I found it to be interesting and I thought you might too.…

    • 59 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Milgram covered himself by informing the test subject that would receive the shock what would happen. Yet, the information he provided was inaccurate and therefore not legally acceptable any longer. Milgram began the experiment by completely misinforming his subjects of what the true intention of the experiment was. This begins to breach the moral…

    • 1259 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    After watching “Milgram Experiment” and “Stanford prison Experiment” I was intrigued to read “Research and Experimentation” by Cyril H. Wecht. In this article, he seriously enlightened me on the history and great examples of a few questionable research experiments used on humans. Cyril starts off by explaining how the CIA carried out various unethical human experiments that lead to serious injury even death in some cases. These types of experiments caught the eye of World Medical Association (WMA), which in 1949 at a meeting in London they formed an international code stating that under no circumstances a doctor is permitted to experiment on humans causing any type of negative affects to them. Of course, a decade and a half later they revised…

    • 320 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    One concept we talked about is class was obedience, people’s tendency to conform to authority, and was demonstrated in a famous experiment done by Stanley Milgram. Very recently I had an experience with this phenomenon. It was here in China, two weekends ago when Lion took us on a Saturday trip to the Leshan Giant Buddha. At the beginning of the trip we met as a group near the main entrance to the mountain. Paul said we would have two hours to do what we wanted then we would meet back at that spot at 2pm.…

    • 356 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Many people have the idea that during WW1 Nazis killed and tortured many Jews freely and even willingly. What Milgram is doing in his experiment is trying to figure out how easily people follow orders, orders that could harm and potentially kill someone. Milgram got participants through a newspaper article, and paying them $450 to complete the experiment (random sampling). The experiment was carried out in a lab at Yale, causing ecological validity to be good, as it 's a very trustworthy institution and subjects are more likely to abide when in a laboratory compared to a real world setting. He was using a deceiving method by tricking the “teacher” to believe that every time he flipped a set of 30 switches, which were ranged from Slight Shock…

    • 929 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The Milgram Experiment Why people follow orders given by their authority figures? It's most likely because there highly influenced by these figures. So they will do anything for these figures even if they don’t like the order. An example of people following highly risked orders was Nazi soldiers in World War II. A person named Stanley Milgram actually created experiments on how far people would go to obey instructions in 1961.…

    • 262 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Stanley Milgram conducted many experiments testing the social control, or the strategies that are meant to prevent deviant behavior (Schaefer). One experiment includes random people who were told to be performing a test on the effect of punishment on learning. A subject would receive the punishment of an electric shock while the other would administer the test and give the increasingly painful shock; however, the test was rigged to where the subject would always be administering the test and the “student” receiving the test would answer incorrect answers on purpose and act as if the electric shock got increasingly worse as it continued. In reality, the experiment observed the execution of orders from an authority figure no matter how immoral.…

    • 261 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Milgram experiment is the experiment to figure out the effects of punishment on participant and how they respond to it. The experiment is like a game with a punish method( participants are hooked up with shock generator). The game is pretty simple, but not easy in which the participants have to indicate the first words that was previously paired with four words. The rule for this game is that once they participants answer a wrong response, they will be hurt by the shock generator. The more answer they get wrong, the higher intensity is of the shock generator.…

    • 395 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Milgram Experiment Introduction Many people question whether the Milgram experiment was ethical or not, and whether the experiment should had been allowed at all. But like most significant psychological discoveries, sometimes ethics could’ve been overseen in order to obtain great data. Because of Milgram experiment, psychologists today have a better understanding of group dynamics. Milgram’s experiment enabled better understanding of human obedience to an authority figure. Ethics that might have been violated throughout the process of Milgram’s study can be justified in the experiment itself.…

    • 796 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Milgram Experiment In the 1960s, Stanley Milgram (1993-1984) began an experiment that would test to see how obedient people would be no matter the circumstances. One experiment Milgram performed consisted of volunteers shocking someone they did not know if he or she did not answer a question correctly. As the questions are answered incorrectly, the voltage would rise. Unknown to the volunteer, the subject that is being shocked is an actor that is not being electrocuted, and the volunteer was the subject of the experiment. As the experiment continued, the volunteers began to become stressed (Taylor, Peplau, & Sears, 2005, p. 228).…

    • 788 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    An experiment to test how far a person is willing to go in the name of obedience was conducted at Yale University. People are usually obedient to people with power or above them, therefore, in this experiment an administrator would tell the test subjects to shock the victim, who was obviously, an actor/someone in on the experiment. In this article the author, Stanley Milgram elaborates and describes the experiment. Like any other article out there, there are weakness along with strengths.…

    • 725 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Most have heard of the famous thought experiment conceived by British philosopher, Phillipa Foot; in which the question is posed whether a person would pull a lever to divert a train and kill only a single railroad worker or act in passivity and let the train run its course, killing four workers. Most people who answer this question claim that they would pull the lever, thus diverting the train. In the second part of the thought experiment, a new scenario is proposed in which the lever that was used to divert the train towards the single worker is replaced with a very large man. Responses tend to be less utilitarian and more emotionally influenced. Most people would choose not to push the large man over the bridge even to save the lives of four men.…

    • 732 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays