Most scientists would tell you that in a controversial scientific investigation such as Stanley Milgram’s “The Perils of Obedience” or Philip G. Zimbardo’s “The Stanford Prison Experiment,” it is highly important to avoid bias. Bias, or an opinion, has a great effect on how an experiment is comprehended and can affect whether or not the data gathered can be taken seriously. Hundreds of thousands of studies before it have been condemned because of the lack of objectivity. Though these famous scientists might not have thought twice about it, Milgram and Zimbardo included several forms of bias in their studies and their articles, and the results can be misleading. Both Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at Yale