The Stanford Prison Experiment Essay

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    constructed The Stanford Prison Experiment to observe how prison guards would react to being given power over prisoners, the outcome was appalling. The experience became so realistic for the students volunteering that they went through temporary emotional trauma. The Stanford Prison Experiment has played a huge role in the psychology of human behavior for the purpose of understanding human behavior when they are given too much power, very specific people were chosen to partake in this…

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    Compliance portrays a true story that draws a eerie connection to the Stanley Milgram’s experiment and the Stanford Prison experiment. It involves seemingly normal people committing horrible acts under social influence. However, the real setting of the story in the film versus the laboratorial conditions of the experiments entail the debate over the extent of their connection. While the results of experiments certainly provide insights into the possible social psychological mechanisms that drive…

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment was unlike any other experiment. It was supposed to be an experiment on how people would conform to the roles of guards and prisoners in a role-playing exercise. Over 70 students applied for the aid, but only 25 was selected and they would get paid 15 dollars a day for their participation in the experiment. They took the 25 college students from the university and turn half of them into guards and the other half into prisoners. The Abu Graib situation was way…

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    How willing are humans to fill a role they are given? This is the question that the Stanford Prison Experiment conducted by Philp Zimbardo, professor of psychology, answers, even if it may not have been the original goal of the experiment. When people are pushed to the extremes, by internal or external factors, they are willing to do nearly anything. Zimbardo says that we “create, populate, and perpetuate” “prisons of the mind.” I agree with his statement, as many of the problems we have in a…

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    In my personal opinion, I do not view it as a “successful” experiment because some of Zimbardo’s questions could have been answered by simply investigating or studying certain cases or facilities that cause people’s personalities to be shaped or altered. Even though the study was meant to examine how “good people”…

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    Imagine participating in an experiment that uses memory and learning. Once you arrive you see an instrument that gives electric shocks to a man. This man is on the other side of the wall from you. As you move up in voltages the man begins to experience more pain. This man is in so much pain that he is even screaming. The experimenter persuades and pressures you to continue going on. Would you continue the experiment or would you refuse to go on? Stanley Milgram a social psychologist at Yale…

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    Stanford Prison Experiment What prevented "good guards" from objecting or countermanding the orders from tough or bad guards? The good guards were unable to object or countermand the bad guards because of the fear of what it would do to the guards’ authoritative role in the eyes of the prisoners. If they showed disunity as guards the prisoners could take advantage of the unstructured and create chaos within the walls of the prison. By objecting to the bad guards, they take the risk of the…

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment was a 1973 study by Philip Zimbardo. The study was to investigate how people conform to the roles of guards and prisoners in a role-playing experiment which simulated life in prison. The roles between the 21 male college students were randomly assigned the prisoner or guard role. The prisoners were stripped naked, covered in blindfolds, had all their possessions taken away and locked away in cells. They were given prisoner clothing and bedding, being only referred…

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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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    A standout amongst the most broadly refered to tests in the field of brain science is the Stanford Prison Experiment in which brain research educator Philip Zimbardo set out to examine the suspicion of parts in an imagined circumstance. The point of the test was to research how promptly individuals would adjust to the parts of watch and detainee in a pretending activity that mimicked jail life. Zimbardo (1973) was occupied with seeing if the severity reported among watchmen in American…

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