The Experiment

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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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    unjustifiable demands. This experiment is to benefit readers in ways that no other proven statistic can, for Milgram knew that the results would allow us to visualize what it is that evinces people to produce such tragic chaos at the snap of a superiors ' fingers. Notably, Milgram 's objective was to determine the extent an average person would willingly inflict physical pain to…

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    The Stanford prison experiment was an experiment held between August 14th and went all the way up until August 20th. In this experiment, a psychology professor named Philip Zimbardo attempts to form a model prison where he would select participants to either be guards or prisoners. The participants were interviewed, and the ones chosen were randomly assigned their roles of being either prisoners, or guards. The model prison was created in the basement of Stanford University, and it was meant to…

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    Naval Research, conducted a psychological experiment to determine how average members of society with no history of psychological problems, criminal histories or substance misuse issues would react to the adoption of role of either prison guard or prisoner. The experiment took place in Stanford University, California, USA which had been converted, for all intents and purposes into what appeared to be a functioning prison. The results of the experiment were more dramatic than even Zimbardo…

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    Asch Conformity Experiment

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    This video speaks the truth the conformity experiments which was led by Solomon Asch who was an American psychologist and a pioneer in social brain science who believed that individuals carry on according to how they see the world, not to how it really is. Asch looked to clarify why an individual would offer into group agreement despite the fact that it abused his or her personal beliefs. This video reveals that sequence and methodology of his experiment. According to on the contents of this…

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    the Milgram Experiment I was quite shocked by it. Seeing people so willing to do harm on another person without being threatened was very disturbing, and seeing the few that was pleading to stop was heart breaking. When I put myself in their shoes, I would like to think that I would not harm anyone or anything. However, in all fairness to the idea of what I would do I must evaluate the environment and conditions to which I would have been exposed. If I knew that this was an experiment and the…

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    Zimbardo Prison Experiment

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    “They recreated the original ad [of the prison experiment], and then ran a separate ad omitting the phrase “prison life.” They found that the people who responded to the two ads scored differently on a set of psychological tests. Those who thought that they would be participating in a prison study had significantly higher levels of aggressiveness, authoritarianism, Machiavellianism, narcissism, and social dominance, and they scored lower on measures of empathy and altruism” (Konnikova). The…

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    In 1971, Zimbardo does an experiment to see how the subjects’ attitude gets effected, once they get into their designated roles. The group of 24, who were both mentally and emotionally stable, was going to be split into 2 groups, one group being the guards and the others being the prisoners. Factors like clothing (which could have highly-likely) effected their attitudes. The prisoners were treated like prisoners. The prisoners had poor clothing in contrast to the guards. The guards were…

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    Milgram’s original motive for the experiment was to understand the unthinkable: How could the German people permit the extermination of the Jews? Stanley Milgram wanted to understand the necessary conditions in which a person would obey an authority who commanded actions that went against conscience. Milgram’s findings, published in 1974 had a surplus of reactions. While reading this pls suggest synonyms for violated, breached, etc :( Responses to the experiment included…

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    Stanley Milgram, a famous psychologist at Yale University, conducted an experiment to see how far people would go when being directed by an authoritative figure. This experiment focused on the conflict between obedience to authority and personal conscience. Milgram's reasoning behind this experiment was to examine the justifications for acts of genocide and answer his question, "Could it be that Eichmann and his million accomplices in the Holocaust were just following orders?" (Milgram, 1974).…

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