Obedience

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    Wherever one may go in this world they find obedience. The location or the culture of the area does not matter to the similarity of your findings, all will relate one way, and that is through the mindset of obedience. One will see obedience from pets to owners, parents to children, and even spouse to spouse with how they submit themselves to each other. The Author’s Stanley Milgram, Norimitsu Onishi, Martin Fackler, Po Bronson, Ashley Merryman, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, and Lynn H. Nicholas will…

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    A military that has every subordinate obey orders is practically another government running by using their dictatorial power. If a society reflects that ultimate obedience, many critical thinkers may not exist anymore, but instead blind obedient followers. The superior personnel can easily abuse their power without the worry of losing their rankings or position. By using the perspective of a cause and effect relationship…

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    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…

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    Two psychological experimenters attempted to uncover the most brutal area of the human brain in their articles: Milgram 's "The Perils of Obedience" and Zimbardo 's "The Stanford Prison Experiment". The first and earliest of these experimenters was Stanley Milgram, who conducted his experiments at Yale University. He starts the article with information on testing whether or not a person would administer painful—and eventually lethal—shocks to other people when given the order by an authoritative…

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    There are three parts that make up social influence. One part is conformity and the other two are compliance and obedience. Conformity is defined as adapting to social norms from exposure to information or the social pressures of others. Conformity is present in our society today in many different ways. One of the main ways is through social media. On apps like Instagram or Twitter, trends are started by famous people and companies. This leads to large groups of people doing or buy what these…

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    Milgram’s Obedience Study Milgram’s original motive for executing this ethics breaking experiment was to learn why the German people allowed the murder of millions of Jewish people during the Holocaust. Stanley Milgram wanted to learn as to how people can listen to authority and break their personal morals to follow someone that they believe to be control. During the Holocaust, Nazis led a massacre of millions of Jewish people without letting personal values, such as compassion, stop them from…

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    Obedience and Conformity Assessment 1. What actions did Hitler take to solidify his control over the German government? Hitler’s rise to power was a gradual process that led to his control over the German government and position as Fuhrer. As part of the Nazi party, Hitler was appointed chancellor in 1993 by the president after Hindenburg realized that he must appeal to the Nazi Party in order for laws to be passed. Hitler entices the public and a parade is held in his honor. He practices his…

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    Question 1 The Milgram study was done with the objection of finding out whether obedience for from an authoritative figure was a common occurrence, for example, the killing of Jews by Nazis. Therefore, how long were subjects willing to inflict pin on another person when asked to, despite knowing the seriousness of the injuries. From the experiment, the experimenter established routine through the use of the predefined prods such as ‘please go on and please continue (Myers & Twenge, 2017).’…

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    The primary purpose of the Milgram's obedience/electroshock experiment was to test people's obedience to authority. I feel the test was able to fulfill its objectives. It was successful because it should that the majority of people tested were willing to fully accept, with some reservations, what a authority figure instructed them to do. In The Real World by Ferris and Stein (2008), we are told that to conducted the experiment a system was set were a research subject was assigned being a…

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    held a general consensus: Only one or two of the forty men would likely administer at least 300 volts to the learner, and none of the men (or “only a pathological fringe of about one in a thousand,” as Milgram wrote in his article, “The Perils of Obedience”) would pull the last switches labeled “XXX” (1). These assumptions could not have been further from the truth. Twenty-five of the 40 men continued the experiment to the very end, even after listening to the learner’s shouts of protest,…

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