PSY 310 Social Psychology Fall I 2007 INSTRUCTOR: STAFF [TBA] PHONE: EMAIL: FAX: REQUIRED TEXTS: Title Social Psychology: Unraveling the Mystery Author(s) Kenrick‚ D. T.‚ Neuberg‚ S. L.‚ & Cialdini‚ R. B. Copyright (2007) Publisher Allyn and Bacon. ISBN 0-205-49395-5 Edition 4th Edition This Course Requires the Purchase of a Course Packet: YES NO Argosy University COURSE SYLLABUS PSY310 Social Psychology Faculty Information Faculty Name:
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1 English 1013 10/18/10 In nineteen sixty-three‚ Stanley Milgram conducted an experiment on obedience to authority figures. It was a series of social psychology experiments which measured the willingness of the study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts that conflicted with their personal conscience and confronted them with emotional distress. The experiment resulted in twenty-six out of forty of the participants administering the final massive
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When Albert Camus wrote The Stranger in 1942‚ his intention was to present absurdism and existentialism to the world. The absurdity of life from Camus’s eyes come to life through the main character‚ Meursault. Throughout the novel‚ Meursault doesn’t wish he could live another life nor does he attempt to change his final judgement. Meursault’s inability to feel emotions and express them to others is a primary example of existentialism throughout the novel. From Meursault’s physical descriptions of
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In the book the Stranger by Albert Camus‚ we are introduced to the main character immediately with a very tragic scenario of a death. The main character is a male‚ but he is not your average male shown by his actions and personality. But who is this strange man? his name is Meursault. He seems to lack emotion; because for major events in his life (such as the opening scene) that are full of emotion‚ but he shows absolutely no emotion to these events in his life. He also appears to be very detached
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Tuskegee Experiment is one of the unethical Health Researches done in the United States. The way the research was conducted was against people’s civil rights. Totally secretive and without any objectives‚ procedures or guidance from any government agency. During the time that the project was launched there were very few laws that protected the public from medical malpractice or from plainly negligence. Also the Civil Rights act did not pass until the 1960’s. Before the Tuskegee Experiment in 1926
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Rosenhan experiment The Rosenhan experiment was an experiment into the validity of psychiatric diagnosis‚ conducted by David Rosenhan in 1973. The study is considered an important and influential criticism of psychiatric diagnosis. Rosenhan’s study was done in two parts. The first part involved the use of healthy associates who briefly simulated auditory hallucinations in an attempt to gain admission to 12 different psychiatric hospitals in five different states in various locations in the United
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Stanley Milgram: ’electric shock’ experiments (1963) - also showed the power of the situation in influencing behaviour. 65% of people could be easily induced into giving a stranger an electric shock of 450V (enough to kill someone). 100% of people could be influenced into giving a 275V shock. The Milgram Experiment Stanley Milgram (1963) Experiment: Focusing on the conflict between obedience to authority and personal conscience. Investigate: Whether Germans were particularly obedient to authority
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memory. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology‚ 10‚ 12–21. Keppel‚ G.‚ & Underwood‚ B. J. (1962). Proactive inhibition inshort-term retention of single items Murdock‚ B. B.‚ Jr. (1961). Short-term retention of single pairedassociates. Psychological Reports‚ 8‚ 280. Murdock‚ B. B. (2003). Memory models. In L. Nadel (Ed.)‚ Encyclopediaof cognitive science (Vol Reitman‚ J. S. (1971). Mechanisms of forgetting in short-term memory.Cognitive Psychology‚ 2‚ 185–195. Peterson‚ L. R.‚ & Peterson
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The Stranger Reading Journal Essay In Albert Camus’ The Stranger‚ the story is told in a first person point of view from Monsieur Meursault as the narrator. For a more obvious reason‚ the book is told in his point of view because he is the main character‚ but there are multiple other possibilities for why Camus did so. The book is a memory of what happened leading up to his execution‚ which is why it needed to be in first person point of view. Camus did this because there are a lot of things
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The Guest by Albert Camus Before there were movies and films there were stories and books. Many film creators will base their movies on written stories‚ and although they tend to keep the main premise of the plot‚ setting‚ characters‚ point of view and theme the same‚ sometimes the details will differ. To elaborate on these subjects we can compare the short story written by Albert Camus called The Guest published in 1957 to the short film production created by Michael Williams for his film school
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