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    to teachers or politicians‚ who are in a higher position than we are at. We just follow what they tell us to do without questioning why we have to follow. We are obedient to these people. There is a psychological experiment that deals with the issue of obedience‚ by Staley Milgram. We are clearly able to say that what is wrong as an individual; however‚ when we get together as a group‚ we are no longer able to say that wrong is wrong under the pressure of an authority figure. Why does it happen

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    is filled with tragedies. We often view the source of evil as a murderer‚ con artist‚ or someone who commits fraud. However‚ what if there was evil inside of all of us? The evaluation of ourselves in terms of evilness starts with psychological experiments that test the theory that‚ when put into an authoritarian position‚ a normal person could grow to be evil. However‚ could this really be true if there wasn’t already capacity for evil in such a normal person? Macbeth is an example of our exposure

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    of evil acts and the Milgram‚ Ashe‚ and Stanford experiments can back up theories such as this. Milgram was as experiment that was made to demonstrate how people obey the orders of a superior in a situation in which the results were very interesting. The Ashe experiment served the purpose of showing how people give in to peer pressure in even non-complicated situations and results are important to society now. The Milgram experiment is by far the most significant experiment because it showed how

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    January 28‚ 2014 English 1302 Blind Obedience The way society is depicted throughout Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings” is extremely unusual yet completely realistic. Humans have the tendency to be cruel towards outsiders and that is highly portrayed within the townspeople and the family that finds the angel. It’s difficult to accept what is different because it is taught that what is different must be wrong. Society listens to their leaders. How does one go about

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    come from someone who is in a position higher than we are at. There is a very significant psychological experiment which deals with the issue of obedience. The experiment was conducted by Stanley Milgram. The experiment involved two people where one would play the role of a student trying to remember different words that he had heard‚ and the other person that was the subject o this experiment;

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    Being a Connected View of the Principles of Evidence and the Methods of Scientific Investigation” (A System of Logic) in which he declared “psychology should leave the realm of speculation and philosophy and become a science of observation and experiment.” Commencing in the 1800s‚ psychology began its gradual transition from philosophy to experimentation and the study of physiology. Previous to this‚ psychology had never been defined as a science in its own right like biology‚ physics and chemistry

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    One of them being Milgram’s study of obedience. Milgram wanted to see whether people would still obey a legitimate authority‚ even if they knew the task they were doing was morally wrong. Milgram told the participants that they were investigating whether punishment had an effect on learning. He hired two confederates‚ one of them being the ‘experimenter’ and the other one

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    bad) people can do bad‚ indeed evil things and that this can be explained by the situation in which the acts took place. In 1971 Zimbardo conducted the "Stanford prison experiment" in which students enacted the roles of prison guards and prisoners - the results so traumatised Zimbardo that supposedly he never gave the experiment the complete write-up he intended to. Many years later he acted as an expert witness for the defense of one of the soldiers in the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal. It was

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    In "The Perils of Obedience‚" Stanley Milgram conducted a study that tests the conflict between obeying immoral commands given by authority and refusing authority. The experiment was to see how much pain a normal person would inflict on another person because he/she were being ordered to do so by a scientist. The participants of this experiment included two willing individuals: a teacher and a learner. The teacher was the real subject and the learner was an actor. In almost all case the teacher would

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    The article “If Hitler asked you to electrode a stranger‚ would you? Probably” by Philip Meyer discusses the Milgram experiment that took place in the 1960’s at Yale University. The experiment was designed to test obedience to authorities of higher power and how they can transform and individual to do things they could never do‚ without being pushed past their moral limits. I do believe that people today still value conformity and obedience to authority as they did in Milgram’s time. When people

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