The Stanford Prison Experiment Essay

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    Stanford Prison Experiment I feel I would be a mean sadistic guard who in turn made the prisoners feel helpless. I would not be doing it solely to torment the prisoners, I would be following Zimbardo 's orders. I see myself as a person that tends to follow orders when they are given. Though on no terms could I see myself to be as sadistic as the guard nicknamed John Wayne. If I was given the role of a guard, I feel I would fit the norms of the situation quite well. I feel the guards were…

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    A Review of the Stanford Prison Experiment By Andrew Scudder PSYC 1111 In the Stanford Prison Experiment, the general idea was that prisons do not work when it comes to the rehabilitation of inmates. On the contrary, prisons only succeed in the further distancing of those incarcerated and those in charge of upholding the law. Once a prisoner has served their time, they are more likely to commit another crime. The Stanford Prison Experiment suggests that the relationship…

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    This experiment went wrong and led to mental problems. These problems became so extreme that the experiment was discontinued after 6 days instead of 2 weeks. The Stanford Prison Experiment called into question the idea of Good vs Evil. The experiment showed how situational journey can cause an individual to “compromise” their beliefs. This change in behavior lead to psychological conflict among the “guards” and “prisoners.” The main psychologist that conducted this experiment’s name is Philip…

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    Now, as the book progresses on, Zimbardo launches into his experiment which to me is quite interesting and impressive. In this experiment, Zimbardo is wanting to prove that in certain situations, normal good people can turn into perpetrators of evil who commit such behaviors. He calls this, “The Stanford Prison experiment” in which normal individuals were assigned to prisoners and guards as a test of psychology of imprisonment. After having done this, Zimbardo became witness to an extreme number…

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    In recent years, many experiments have been conducted on conformity, such as the Asch, Stanford Prison, Sherif’s autokinetic effect, and Milgram experiments. Despite strong criticism, all of these experiments yielded similar results. Every one of them showed strong social conformity in its participants. Conformity is defined as, “behavior in accordance with socially accepted conventions or standards.” There are six main types of social conformity: normative, informational, compliance,…

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    Zimbardo Assignment The Stanford Prison Experiment was a psychological study of human replication to captivity, in cognation to the authentic circumstances of prison life. It was conducted in August 1971 by Phillip Zimbardo, a psychologist at Stanford University. Subjects were desultorily assigned, by the flip of a coin, to play the role as prisoner or the role as a prison sentinel. Those assigned to play the role as the sentinel were given night sticks, a whistle, and mirrored sunglasses to…

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    1971 Stanford Prison Experiment conducted by Stanford University Professor Philip Zimbardo, gave an essential viewpoint into the psychology of prison guards (authority figures) as well as inmates. Through this experiment, subcultures arose that defined the roles of guards and inmates. The guards tended to take on more aggressive roles, using psychological abuse towards the inmates as punishment and a means of control. Meanwhile, the "prisoners" were victimized by the "guards." The experiment…

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    By conduction this experiment, Philip Zimbardo psychology professor and leader of the experiment, realized what the environment of a correctional facilitation is like. He also conducted this experiment in order to analyze the results of giving a normal person the right to authority. Giving one group authority and the other group no type human rights the experiment resulted into an unexpected turn of events. In this experiment professor Philip Zimbardo wanted to see how different jobs and roles,…

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    psychology professor, conducted an experiment with hopes to expand on Stanley Milgram’s discovery that the majority of good people will act outside of their moral compasses if the circumstance, specifically one with an authoritative figure, calls for it. Zimbardo’s infamous Stanford Prison Experiment went like this: Zimbardo and his team set out to hire, specifically, mentally stable and strong male college students for two weeks and gave them a role of either a prison guard or a prisoner. They…

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    The Stanford prison experiment was terminated after only six days, originally it was suppose to run for fourteen days, because the situation had gotten out of hand. Students portraying guards became more violent and degrading towards the student prisoners. The guards were waking the prisoners up in the middle of the night to do counts, cleaning toilets with bare hands, taking blankets, pretending to be Frankenstein’s monster, etcetera. All of the acts the guards made the prisoners do was to…

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