comparing the Milgram and Zimbardo Experiments The life in prison than life of freedom. What is better the Zimbardo experiment or Milgram experiment. Between Zimbardo and Milgram both experiments are considered as the same. The Milgram and Zimbardo are classified in using participants in studying their role of being overly empowered by someone with authority. Zimbardo experiments considered the role of controlling a civilization (prison life). The Stanford experiments and the Milgram experiment are designed…
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The Milgram study, conducted in 1961-1962, shocked and fascinated the scientific community with not only its disturbing findings, but also with its questionable experimental methods. The experiment in itself consisted of placing an individual in a situation in which they would be forced to choose either to obey or disobey commands given by an authoritative person that were contrary to their own morals, sense of socially acceptable behaviour and humanity. This essay will concentrate on whether the…
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The Milgram Experiment was to see if people would do something just because the law enforcement told them to even though it would hurt someone(Wikipedia). In the novel Lord of the Flies a group of schoolboys had crashed onto an undiscovered island, where they went along with whatever the leader of the group said to do. Even though some of the things they did got some of the boys killed(N.p.). Events in the novel Lord of the Flies and behaviors observed in the “Milgram Experiment” show that humans…
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From Milgram to Abu Ghraib The prisoner abuses at Abu Ghraib Prison in Iraq have been compared to a number of studies on the lessons in depravity, peer pressure, and the power of authority. The question to be asked is whether the abuse should be explained as expected behavior or deviant behavior. A number of famous experiments by highly respected researchers in the United States have provided some interesting material for the future court martial proceedings one such example is the Milgram Experiment…
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The Controversy of Obedience A classic experiment on the natural obedience of individuals was designed and tested by a Yale psychologist, Stanley Milgram. The test forced participants to either go against their morals or violate authority. For the experiment, two people would come into the lab after being told they were testing memory loss, though only one of them was actually being tested. The unaware individual, called the “teacher” would sit in a separate room, administering memory related…
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RESEARCH ON STANLEY MILGRAM One of the most famous studies of obedience in psychology was carried out by Stanley Milgram (1963). Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at Yale University, conducted an experiment focusing on the conflict between obedience to authority and personal conscience. Milgram (1963) wanted to investigate whether Germans were particularly obedient to authority figures as this was a common explanation for the Nazi killings in World War II. He examined justifications for acts of genocide…
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obey beyond what we believe is right? Yale Psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted an experiment suggesting that people will obey the present authority. Initially his experiments were to explain why thousands of germans killed millions of Jews under the authority of one man. Milgram developed a test that would push people beyond what they believed was right. He tried to convince them that their conscience was less important than the orders given during the test. The controversial experiments revealed…
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authority figure so after world war II and the atrocities the Nazis committed a lot of people believed that the Germans have a character deficit which make them ready to obey people in authority no matter the act and that was what Milgram set out to question in his experiment. Milgram chose a sample of 40 volunteers by advertising in the newspaper. They were told that they will be participating in a human memory study in Yale university and they were all between the ages of 20 to 50 years, male, white…
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The Experiment In the article “The Perils of Obedience”, a Yale professor by the name of Stanley Milgram explains how he will perform different investigation experiments to evaluate accountability of one’s behavior, and moral sense when an authority figure is involved. In everyday situations, people obey orders because they want to get rewards, and avoid the negative consequences for disobeying authority. In some instances people will obey even when they are required to violate their own values…
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The Bias of Milgram and Zimbardo 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…
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