The Milgram Experiment Essay

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    The general reaction that I had toward this study was disgust and disappointment. The disgust was directed toward the relationship between authority figures and the inmates. Be it the guards or the "prison" superintendent, there were major flaws in this study that opened a flood gate of unethical practices. As for the disappointment, that reaction was solely triggered by the Zimbardo, the "prison superintendent". The manner in which these young men were allowed to treat their peers for the sake…

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    prison guard; the results were unexpected. Participants in the program showed evidence of psychological changes within thirty-six hours, and the experiment ended after only six days, eight days shorter than planned (REFERENCE). The power of a situation can overcome the power of one’s mind, as seen through the role-play of the participants. Zimbardo’s experiment is not an isolated or imagined event;…

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    research proves to be significant in that it identified parallels between real prison and the “prison” at Stanford in the subjects of prison riots, uprisings, rebellions, kidnappings, and murders. He observed that prisons continued to be failed social experiments more than 20 years later, and noted that prison conditions worsened as a consequence of the politicization of prisons. 4. A recent application of this research is the expansion Zimbardo made of his findings on prisoner abuse to the…

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment is perhaps one of the most known and controversial psychological experiments in both psychology and criminology. While the Stanford Prison Experiment did invoke questions as to the results of the experiment, it invoked more questions as to ethics in psychological experiments and what is acceptable. The Stanford Prison Experiment by Philip Zimbardo asks for student volunteers for a paid experiment where students would be randomly selected to play guard and prisoner…

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    Prison Experiment which was conducted by Phillip Zimbardo was a very crucial experiment and changed the whole study of psychology that the world now knows today. This experiment continues to be one of the most notorious and well known psychology experiments that has ever been organized. It took place in the basement of Stanford college in 1971. Zimbardo took students at the school and told them to play the roles of prisoner and guards. This experiment was supposed to be a six week experiment but…

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    Stanford Prison Experiment A psychological experiment testing human behavior when the variables of the situation are manipulated. In 1971, a psychologist, Philip Zimbardo conducted this experiment in the basement of the Stanford Psychology Department located at the college. When put in a situation where people do not question their morals, the evil in them will become more apparent. To find the psychological effects when taking on the roles as either a prisoner or prison guard. Many people…

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    of their actions and how others may perceive them. At the turn of the millennium, Josh Harris, a dot-com kid who rose to his wealth with his company Pseudo, attempted to model the privacy loss that occurs as a result of the Internet with his two experiments: Quiet and We Live in Public. Quiet was a closed, underground community in which the participants were followed by cameras 24/7. With We Live in Public, Harris subjected himself and his girlfriend, Tanya, to constant videotaping in their New…

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    After reading about the two cases, Subject to Aboriginal Experiments and The Tuskegee Experiment, I can’t help but wonder do researchers who began with good intentions, become selfish people that lets their experiments lose its moral in order to obtain their goals. Its immoral that researchers tries to take advantages of those at a disadvantages, such as those hungry children and poor black men. In general, experiments should first be approved by the Institutional Review Boards, and even if its…

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    Zimbardon Prison Experiment

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    The experiment began on August 14, 1971 and was intended to run for seven to fourteen days (Haney 4). The selection process was meant to choose the most normal, stable students out of the applicants to ensure the results of the experiment were not changed by the subjects’ predispositions. Zimbardo’s goal with the experiment was to put participants that were deemed normal and average and see how the prison environment and their roles in it changed them over time.(Haney 4) The volunteers were…

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    Doris Lessing’s persuasive piece called Group Minds, touches on the innate group behavior seen in humans. She first goes into depth about how, even more so those involved in Western society, humans as a whole tend to prefer being in a group over being alone. She emphasizes that, ironically, despite the claim to individuality we stick to groups. To emphasize this point, she points out the contradictory ideas, and backs up her statement by explaining studies on the human psyche in groups. Then,…

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