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    haha

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    ENGLISH 101-05 Fall 2002 Instructor: Cindy Butos‚ Trinity College ASSIGNMENTS for Papers 5 and 6 English 101‚ Writing‚ is composed of first-year students who were required to take the course. The writing is a mix of informal “Writing Exercises” that are designed to move writers to the more formal “Papers” that they peer review and revise 2 more times. Prior to the assignments described below‚ students wrote two papers on the same topic that involved research. The first was an

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    Bonus Reflection Paper on the Kawakami Paper and Stanley Milgram’s Obedience Study Ella Price In Kerry Kawakami’s paper “Mispredicting Affective and Behavioural Response to Racism” the paradox of remarking upon how strongly overt prejudice is condemned within modern society and the acts of why blatant racism still frequency occurs were scientifically examined (Kawakami‚ K.‚ Dunn‚ E.‚ Karmali‚ F.‚ & Dovidio‚ F‚ D.‚ 2009). The results of this study were truly astonishing‚ yet

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    Six degrees of separation

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    people‚ what is the probability that each member of N is connected to another member via k_1‚ k_2‚ k_3...k_n links?)‚ after twenty years they were still unable to solve the problem to their own satisfaction. In 1967‚ American sociologist Stanley Milgram devised a new way to test the theory‚ which he called "the small-world problem." He randomly selected people in the mid-West to send packages to a stranger located in Massachusetts. The senders knew the recipient’s name‚ occupation‚ and general location

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    This idea that perhaps seemingly “good” people can be able to ignore what is obviously morally wrong led me to an article about an interesting experiment: The Milgram experiment. This experiment‚ developed and run by Stanley Milgram‚ took place at Yale University in 1961. Milgram’s experiment consisted of having volunteers from a diverse range of backgrounds and occupations individually brought into a room and sat at a table with an array of levers. Across from this volunteer was another person who

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    Milgram conducted a test in 1963 because he was very interested in researching how far people would go in obeying an instruction even if it involved physically hurting another person.  Stanley Milgram was interested in how quickly and easily ordinary people could be influenced into harming or mudering inncent people. He got this idea from studying the way the Germans atrociously treated international prisoners in the second world war during the peak of Hitlers racial purification regime to rule the

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    Conformity and Obedience

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    392) stated that: Obedience is affected by direction (from somebody in higher authority). This essay will explore circumstances in which we are likely to conform; or obey others. This will be done by drawing on research carried out by Milgram‚ Asch‚ Crutchfield and Zimbardo. There are many ways in which we conform; some are useful others are not. For example‚ if we did not conform and adhere to the Highway Code there would be absolute chaos on our roads and lives would be at risk

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    1 Roaring Camp Handout The Basics During Week 14 (4/13‒4/19) there will be a special discussion forum on Roaring Camp: The Social World of the California Gold Rush‚ by Susan Lee Johnson. Participation in this discussion forum is mandatory. Your term paper on Roaring Camp is due by 10 PM on Monday 5/6 and is worth 100 points. Under no circumstances will I accept a late term paper. There is also an extra credit assignment based on Roaring Camp . Reading the Book & Focus Questions for the Week

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    Running head: EFFECT OF AUTHORITY Effect of Authority on the Likelihood to Conform Abstract To explore the relationship between increased power or social status and a person’s likelihood to conform‚ forty high school students (5 boys and 5 girls from each grade level: freshmen‚ sophomores‚ juniors and seniors) will be taken one at a time into a room with five confederates (classmates who are considered by their peers to be in the “popular crowd”). The participants will be shown a variety

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    The Social Animal

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    “Man is by nature a social animal; an individual who is unsocial naturally and not accidentally… [or who] does not partake of society is either a beast or a god‚” (Aristotle‚ c. 328 BCE.) Aristotle may have been the first person to articulate the basic principles of social psychology. Elliot Aronson‚ not the first to write about them‚ but perhaps a modern Aristotle in his teaching‚ writing‚ and research‚ wrote a book titled The Social Animal. In it‚ with an emphasis on conformity‚ he explains

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    Dalrymple

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    society function properly. Dalrymple starts with summarizing Milgram’s experiment that took place at Yale‚ and he states the events that occurred. He added that Milgram proved that people shock strangers‚ inflict pain‚ and go against their morals only because they wanted to obey the instructions of the conductor. He notes that although Milgram did not find everything he wanted to know‚ he found that‚ “even decent people might become torturers and killers” (120). Dalrymple sees that many kids‚ teens

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