"Milgram experiment ethical" Essays and Research Papers

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    Rogerian Argument

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    purpose behind it. Thoughts/ Quotes about free will: “The will is never free- it is always attached to an object‚ a purpose. It is simply the engine in the car- it can’t steer.” – Joyce Cary Support: “Of the forty subjects in the first experiment‚ twenty-five obeyed the orders of the experimenter to the end‚ punishing the victim until they reached the most potent shock available on the generator.”(929) Peculiar reactions of many people were that they come about in high stress

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    When making an ethical decision using this philosophy‚ a person would consider what was best for the group‚ even though that decision may have a negative impact on a smaller group‚ or a lesser negative impact. An example of this would be if a person is leading a large

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    In “Opinions and Social Pressure‚” social psychologist‚ Solomon Asch‚ concludes his findings of numerous experiments conducted to reveal the impact of peer pressure among the individual. His experiments consisted of seven to nine college students; one who was the focal subject of the experiment and the rest who were members of the group instructed to answer accordingly. After many trials and the introduction of different variables‚ Asch finds that

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    thought of morals and beliefs. In the experiments the men obey the authority figure by doing cruel things they would not usually do. These experiments turn mentally stable men into a person willing to inflict harsh punishments on innocent people while following orders. Night by Elie Wiesel‚ The Milgram Shock Experiment‚ and the stanford prison experiment shows how obedience to an authority can cause people to stray from their conscience. In the Stanford Prison experiment the men were deindividualized

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    Simon Wiesenthal Analysis

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    position. Providing an answer to this question can be determined by the analysis of Simon’s experiences and findings of experimenters. Philip Zimbardo and Stanley Milgram’s experiments demonstrate the relationship and effects that authority has on subjects. In “The Perils of Obedience”‚ Milgram applies his analysis of his experiments showing

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    Evaluate Milgram's Study

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    Discuss Research Into Obedience (12 marks) Milgram did a lab experiment‚ varying different situational pressures to see which had the greatest effect on obedience. He told 40 male volunteers that it was a study of how punishment affects learning. After drawing lots‚ the real participant was assigned the role of ’teacher’. The learner was a confederate. The teachers job was to administrate a learning task and deliver ’electric shocks’ to the learner (in another room) if he got a question wrong

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    Assignment Conformity

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    manipulate people. This phenomenon of social uniformity is called conformity. Individuals orientate on their environment and adjust the behavior. Conformity is the act of matching attitudes‚ beliefs and behaviors to group norms. As seen in the Asch’s experiment‚ where probands had to collate a given line to another line of three with the same length‚ most of the participants picked the same answer as its group members. Even though the correct answer seemed obvious‚ the probands acted conform. The tendency

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    In a society where each individual is held up against unrealistic expectations it is undeniable that people often compromise themselves to fit into the social norms of society. Social roles and social norms are the root in which much of social influence takes place. Social influence is the act by which an individual’s emotions‚ attitudes‚ and behaviors are altered when interacting with another individual or a group who are perceived to be similar or desirable. Social influence dictates many areas

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    Social Deviance

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    ideas from the work of Stanley Milgram in your answer. Many view murder as the malicious taking of human life. Murder during wartime in which one armed service member takes the life of an opposing armed service member is justified by military orders and beliefs. Of course‚ it is not always so clear. The rules of war are ever changing. The inspiration for social scientist Stanley Milgram’s work was the acts of Nazis during World War II. His experiments showed how obeying authority could

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    Milgram's Agency Theory

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    following World War 2‚ the subject became a popular one for researchers fascinated by the amount of obedience shown by the German soldiers in Nazi Germany when faced with orders that resulted in the torture and deaths of millions of Jews. Stanley Milgram‚ a Jew himself‚ decided that the only way to prevent any further occurrence of the Holocaust was to understand why the German soldiers had apparently blindly followed orders. The ‘Germans are different’ hypothesis Some commentators believed that

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