Zimbardo says‚ “core of human nature that good people can do evil things‚ and that good people will dominate over a bad situation‚ in fact‚ one way to look at the Stanford Prison study is that if you put good people in an evil place‚ and we saw who won‚ well the sad message is in this case is that the evil place won over the good people.” (The Stanford Prison Experiment). The main similarity between Lord of the Flies and the Stanford Prison Experiment was that they both descended into darkness.
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Philip Zimbardo was born on March 23‚ 1933. He studied and attended both Brooklyn College and Yale University. He majored in three areas: sociology‚ anthropology‚ and psychology. In 1977‚ he developed the Stanford Shyness Clinic. The clinic helped people get over shyness in social environments. Before working at Stanford University he taught at New York University and Columbia University‚ where he also was a professor of psychology. He then began working at Stanford University as a professor. He
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Some examples of dysfunction during the stanford prison experiment are one of the guys went into the prison experiment. He thought it was going to be an easy way to get money for a summer job and then when he got there he got the role of being a prisoner. He just lost it he started to say that he was going crazy and that something was eating him inside out. He felt like he was going to explode and so the guards reacted by putting him in the hole. Then the guy would still yell and say he wanted out
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The experiment‚ Stanford Prison was led by professor Philip Zimbardo. He and his team recruited 24 male students‚ who were randomly divided into two groups: prisoners and guards. The students were told they would be paid $15 a day and that the experiment would run for two weeks. In the video‚ Quiet Rage- The Stanford Prison Experiment‚ DeIndividuation played a well lit role through out the video. DeIndividuation is the process of making someone the same has everyone else rather than being themselves
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Devin Crockrel Shannon Smith Eng 112 18 June 2013 Obedience to Authority: “The Stanford Prison Experiment” “The Stanford Prison Experiment” was a well-known and controversial study. It took place in 1973 and delved into the human psyche behind roles of authority‚ and obedience. The setting was a controlled prison environment at Stanford University. The experiment was meant to study the process in which “guards” and “prisoners” learn to become obedient‚ and an authoritarian. The subjects
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the same manner as the middle-class kids in the experiment. I believe the urban kids would handle the stress of these situations with less stress than that of their counter parts. The reason I state this due to exposures and existing environment. Urban kids deal with a greater amount of hardships and constant opposition in life compared to other classes if kids. Urban kids also create a thicker emotional skin within
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"The Stanford Prison Experiment was a landmark psychological study of the human response to captivity‚ in particular‚ to the real world circumstances of prison life." What was a psychological study? More as‚ what was the Stanford Prison Experiment? As soon as those words popped up on my screen‚ the very next thing I did was Google it. The very first things that appeared was a deep explanation of exactly what it was; "an attempt to investigate the psychological effects of power between prisoners and
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Zimbardo Research Paper Leslie Massey PSYCH/620 01/22/2015 Professor Sharon McNelly Zimbardo Research Paper The Stanford Prison Experiment was a study conducted in 1971 by Dr. Phillip Zimbardo. According to Dr. Steve Taylor (2007)‚ “It’s probably the best known psychological study of all time.” (Classic Studies in Psychology‚ 2007). Zimbardo stated that the point was to see what would happen if he put “really good people in a bad place” (Dr. Zimbardo‚ 2007). He did this during a time
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1. Was it ethical to do the prison study in the way that Zimbardo conducted it? Why or why not? Explain your position substantively. I don’t believe that Zimbardo prison experiment was unethical. I do believe that it was morally wrong what he put the volunteers through and the extent he took his study. He himself admitted that he too got wrapped up in his role. Though as it was made clear in class there is a difference between moral and ethical. As defined by Webster’s dictionary ethical is conforming
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Stanford Prison Experiment 1) What police procedures are used during arrests‚ and how do these procedures lead people to feel confused‚ fearful‚ and dehumanized? a. Policemen went around the neighborhood to arrest college students from their houses for robbery‚ burglary‚ and violation of penal codes. After they were searched‚ spread against the police car and handcuffed‚ they brought them to the police station. The guards had worn sunglasses so the suspects wouldn’t be able to look at their eyes
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