Stanley Milgram Experiment Essay

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    expected of them. Stanley Milgram was an inquisitive psychologist who was bold enough to conduct what no other curious mind had- find the source that gave the sense of obligation when it came from a legitimate authority figure- even if it meant causing life threatening harm to others. The issue addressed is whether one can decipher the difference between ethical obedience and unjustifiable demands. This experiment is to benefit readers in ways that no other proven statistic can, for Milgram knew…

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    Authority governs the social hierarchal scale, and people are afraid to go against someone above them. People believe someone in authority is making the right decisions for societ, so they have no reason to go against them. Milgram and the Holocaust: A Reexamination explains the correlation between genocide and obedience. George R. Masteroianni looks into Milgram’s research and its account for the blind obedience of Nazi’s during World War II (Masteroianni, p. 159). He explains…

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    Question One General Strain Theory General strain theory is based off of many different theories from multiple disciplines (King, 2016a, para. 7). Agnew states that deviance and crime are adaptations to strain (Akers & Sellers, 2013, p. 187). Deviance does not occur automatically from strain though, it only occurs when the conditions of strain are in conjunction with a psychological state of “negative affect” such as anger, disappointment, embarrassment, or frustration (King, 2016a, para. 2).…

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    Abstract What are the effects of peer pressure on conformity? Peers have a duty to be mostly distinct when understanding peer pressure. Peer pressure can be applied by TV that transfers to an individual the standard way to conduct one's self, by political figures who charm to patriotism, by families that appeal to family loyalty or traditions, and by any other crowd with which an individual classifies. There is a terrible social enthusiasm to be a member of a crowd, and group membership…

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    a result of real or imagined group pressure.” An active form of social influence is Compliance which is when an individual changes his or her behaviour in response to an explicit or implicit request made by another person. There have been many experiments in psychology investigating conformity and group pressure. Jenness (1932) was one of the first psychologist to study conformity.…

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    about the work of social psychologist, Stanley Milgram (an unsmiling Peter Sarsgaard), based on his overwhelming studies on the human obedience to authority. In this biographical drama, whose theme is sufficiently enticing to keep us watching with a responsive curiosity, Almereyda uses his creative freedom to edify a somewhat loose narrative that drinks from the thoughts and explanations given by the observant experimenter who carried out multiple experiments on obedience. The first one started…

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    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…

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    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…

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    This research paper is in accordance with a pervious research done by a man named Stanley Milgram in the years 1963,1965 and 1974. Milgram’s study was in regards to obedience and focused on the idea of people’s response to authority figures. He wanted to find out under what conditions people would either agree or refuse the command of an authority figure. In 2009, Jerry Burger, a psychologist coming from the university of Santa Clara proceeded to semi-replicate this study in regards to a…

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    Szegedy-Maszak and Milgram In Marianne Szegedy-Maszak's article The Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal: Sources of Sadism, explains how psychologically these American soldiers could commit such vial acts. She then explores the possibilities pertaining to the situation and conditions these solders were withstanding. Szegedy-Maszak then delves into psychologist Herbert Kelman's three necessary traits to convict torture: authorization, routinization, and dehumanization (Maszak 76). Stanley Milgram has…

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