The Milgram Experiment Essay

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    Milgram’s experiment on obedience to authority is one of the best known studies in social psychology. It was repeated several times in different variations. These replications extended our knowledge about the phenomenon of complying to authorities’ orders. One of them was the experiment conducted by Hofling et al. This essay will outline the similarities and differences between these two studies. Firstly, in their aims, results and conclusions. Secondly, their methodological and ethical aspects.…

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    The electric shock experiment on obedience to authority was conducted by Stanley Milgram, a social psychologist at Yale University in the early 1960s. Being a Jewish himself, he was aware of the mass murder performed by those accused at the World War II, Nuremberg War Criminal trials (McLeod, 2007). They claimed that they were simply following orders from their leaders. Milgram was therefore interested in investigating whether German soldiers in the Nazi killings in World War II were…

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    Milgram Experiment Reflection Paper In May 1967, Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram was leading a study linked between obedience and behavior. The experiment involved the experimenter, teacher and the learner. The experimenter would then prompt the teacher to give the learner different levels of shock. The level of shocks ranged from slight shock which was 15v to a shock that transmitted volts as powerful as 450v danger severe shock. The experiment included 40 males the ages ranging…

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    Laura Topf Honors English 9 2nd hour Ms.Walters 14 March 2016 The Reason for This Madness In many situations, people do immoral things with little to no explanation. In the Milgram experiments, a subject was told to quiz another person, and shock the person if he got the answer wrong. When the subjects questioned if this was right or okay, they were told that they had no responsibility. And so in almost every case they on administering higher and higher voltage shocks.By the end of the…

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    Milgram and Stanford Experiment During the Milgram and Stanford experiment, each person had a special role. When given a role, people try their best to fulfill their duties no matter what is required of them. These experiments aim to understand how far someone will go to obey their superiors and follow instructions. You were either a prisoner, guard, teacher, or a learner. Each and every one of these participants were influenced into having demand characteristics. As I was being brought up, of…

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    Milgram Experiments

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    The milgram studies and their replications are not ethical research. The studies was not based on honest communication, they would tell them that they must go on with the experiment and did not give them an out. They also told the participants that one would get shocked and one would press the button but no one actually got shocked. The participants were not treated fairly either during this experiment. They were put into situations that could have left lasting effects on them without warning.…

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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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    Deception is used in Milgram experiment which raises the question of validity and reliability. Connolly, (2011), infers that deception was used to safeguard the true nature of the study. Clearly we know that deception was used in the expense of getting results. For example, the participants were led to believe that they are administering real electric shock and were unaware that the learner was a confederate of Milgram. However, Milgram (1974) insisted that the deception was absolutely…

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    understanding of why it happened and what can we do to learn from it and in a sense never to let it happen again. Events such as slavery, the Trail of Tears, and for this specific paper the Holocaust. This is why social psychology and the many studies over experiments are extremely important to educators and psychologists. There have been various studies completed to tie in a reason to why it happened and what made people think that they had to participate in this event, and it all boiled down…

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    talk about Asch and Milgram experiments and discuss whether or not the groups that knew each other versus the groups that don't, to determine whether or not the groups are more susceptible to conformity.” The Asch conformity experiments were a series of studies that starkly demonstrated the power of conformity in groups.” The Milgram experiment, “was an experiment focusing on the conflict between obedience to authority and personal conscience.” Now that we know what each experiment is about…

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