The Milgram Experiment Essay

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    being weary and restless through lack of interest.” Bill Wasik discusses his evolution to boredom in his essay entitled, “My Crowd Experiment: The Mob Project.” Bill coined the term “Flash Mob”. Influenced by Stanley Milgram, through the use of technology, he executed a total of 6 successful whimsical social experiments whose only goal was to attract a crowd. Milgram elegantly documented the essences of herd behavior, what economists call a “bandwagon affect”; the instinctive tendency of the…

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    Stanley Milgram's Study

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    certain actions by following the rules and orders when the person who did the experiment was nearby or in the sight of that participant, which made them to obey the demands given whereas when the person was not in sight, there were no models of disobedience. However, for Milgram’s study he chose a large sample size of one thousand participants and they were each chosen to play the role of being a teacher in the experiment. In addition, as a teacher they had to perform a certain action, such as…

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    Obedience Psychology

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    Imagine that you have been asked to be a part of an experiment, you are taken to a room and are told that someone is in the room neighboring you. You are then asked to ask the individual in the adjacent room a series of questions. You are instructed to shock the individual if they get a question wrong. You are then administered a shock yourself to grasp the amount of pain that you can place on the individual however, the voltage of the shocks will increase as the individual continues to get…

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    committed by thousands of seemingly “normal” individuals during the Holocaust, Stanley Milgram set out to discover the causes and triggers of unquestioning obedience. He inquired why so many people from uneventful backgrounds followed orders from the most tyrannical and prejudice leader ever facing this world. Basing his theory from that of a grade school friend and famous situationist—Philip Zimbardo—Milgram began to explore the possibility of a situation to force a person to act in opposition…

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    Fancy Title In his 1963 essay, “Disobedience as a Psychological and Moral Problem,” philosopher Erich Fromm argues that disobedience to authority started human history and blind obedience may cause its destruction. Fromm’s view on obedience to authority is that when we obey authority, even when it goes against our own reasoning and morals, then that obedience is cowardly and destructive while any act affirming individual will and autonomy is an act of freedom. Humanity could easily destroy…

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    Across history, human beings have a tendency to obey orders, which ten becomes a norm. The Milgram study of obedience reveals the extent to which people will go in obeying orders and how this is so ingrained in people, that they dare not challenge abuse of power. The Milgram sentiments about obedience are replicated in the Gorge Orwell dystopian novel, 1984, where people show great willingness to obey those in positions of power even when it goes against their ethical and moral convictions,…

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    There is a lot of controversy over personality testing as well. The most common criticism touches validity and reliability of this method. Annie Murphy Paul in her book “The Cult of Personality” questioning validation and reliability of personality testing. She says: “often invalid, unreliable, and unfair”. She describes personality test as an industrial astrology and critics this form of assessment as “slippery, often underground, hard to monitor and measure “In her opinion very often tests are…

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    Early Conformity Studies

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    The purpose of this report is to investigate influences in today’s society that centres on conformity. The investigation focuses on whether or not the findings from early conformity studies hold any merits in todays’ standard of faceless communication. The study also focuses on the extent culture plays in strengthening conformity in modern society. Social psychology pursues to understand human nature and societal influences (Brown, 2006). It seeks to understand how human behaviour is influenced…

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    Moreover, I will ASSESS the reason why people CONFORM by using MILGRAM’S studies and also gauge MILGRAM’S studies of obedience. Also Iwill DELIBERATE the influence of minority influence on society. I will now need to evaluate weather Milgram’s studies are countenance through the evidence of reasons given for why people obey. Conformity refers to the act of changing of a particular belief or individual’s behaviour involving the pressure of social norms or expectations. “yielding to group…

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    Obedience is when an individual follows orders or ideas that have been placed by someone other than himself. Erich Fromm poses the question, “Why is man so prone to obey and why is it so difficult for him to disobey?” (624). Throughout all of human history we have been taught to follow certain rules and societal norms. We rely on others, whether it be a group of people or one individual; we are not accustomed to being alone and cannot stand to be so for a long period of time. We may think that…

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