"Milgram experiment ethical" Essays and Research Papers

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    there are many other factors that contribute to what makes people do evil acts. The social psychology concepts of obedience‚ power‚ and the fundamental attribution error are explored throughout this paper through case studies of the Stanford Prison Experiment‚ the Jonestown cult‚ and the prisoner abuse at Abu Ghriab. Low Effort Thinking Each day people encounter peers‚ family‚ and colleagues. Throughout different social circles and situations people evaluate situations and each other using their

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    lessing or erich fromm can be used as other sources. when introducing milgrom-you need more than a basic introduction-use first‚ last name and his credentials-but because of the experiment and it’s importance to the quotations‚ you need to take a couple of sentences and briefly and concisely summarize his experiments and query

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    Stanley Milgram is a famous psychologist who focused his studies on authority and peoples reaction and obedience to it. His famous experiment and it’s results were groundbreaking in psychology‚ surprising both psychologists and regular people alike. First I will discuss the reason for Milgrims study of obedience to authority. Then I will explain the experiment‚ its formulation‚ and its results. Finally I will cover the influence of the experiment on psychology and society. Stanley Milgrim was

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    Obedience to Authority

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    Outline: Obedience Synthesis I. Background Information: Obedience defined by Andrew Colman‚ in human behavior‚ is a form of “social functions in which a person yields to explicit instructions or orders from an authory figure". Obedience is generally distinguished from compliance‚ which is behavior influenced by peers‚ and from conformity‚ which is behavior intended to match that of the majority. Obedience can be seen as both a sin and a virtue. No human social organization can function without

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    2004). Some of the most memorable and influential studies in the field of psychology depict individuals near hysteria at the sight of an individual in a lab coat as shown by Milgrams (1974) work on obedience and authority (Cialdini and Goldstein‚ 2004). This is also depicted in Asch’s (1956) line-judgement conformity experiments where individuals were observed to see if they would pit their own knowledge of correct response against other’s incorrect responses (Cialdini and Goldsteien‚ 2004). In both

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    Stanley Milgram’s experiment in 1963‚ in which he set up a scenario that convinced people they were harming an individual they had met only minutes before through electrical

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    Obedience

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    obedient to the point of causing harm to others‚ because to be disobedient requires the courage to be alone against authority. In Stanley Milgram’s "Perils of Obedience" experiment‚ his studies showed that sixty percent of ordinary people would agree to obey an authority figure even to the point of severely hurting another human being. (Milgram 347). Disobedience is not always wrong. The truth is sometimes it is necessary to be disobedient. In Hebrew mythology‚ human history began because of an act of disobedience

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    by Stanley Milgram in 1974. In the essay he describes his experiments on obedience to authority. I feel as though this is a great psychology essay and will be used in psychology 101 classes for generations to come. The essay describes how people are willing to do almost anything that they are told no matter how immoral the action is or how much pain it may cause. This essay even though it was written in 1974 is still used today because of its historical importance. The experiment attempts to

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    A Stimulated Prison Study

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    “A Study of Prison Guards in a Stimulated Prison”‚ an experiment conducted in 1973 at Stanford University‚ by one of the most famous Psychologists to date‚ Philip Zimbardo. Interestingly‚ the Office of Naval Research sponsored the study as part of an ongoing programme tailored to generate a better understanding of the first principles of psychological processes underlying human aggression (Haney‚ Banks‚ & Zimbardo‚ 1973). A famous experiment that is widely propagated in the education of social psychology

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    shown that when confronted by social norms individuals will often adjust their behaviour closer to the perceived norm. The Asch (1951) experiment involved subjects performing a perception task saying which of a selection of lines matched a control line in length. The subjects were unaware that the other participants in the room were confederates. During the experiment confederates would give the same incorrect answer to the question. Asch found that no one conformed on all the critical trials‚ and 13

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