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Psychological Experiments : The Milgram Experiment

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After WW2 was over in 1945, Nazi soldiers were rounded up and put on trial for their killings. For most of the soldiers put on trial, their excuse for killing people was that they were following orders. With this idea in the back of his mind, a social psychologist by the name of Stanley Milgram created an experiment to figure out how obedient a person really was to their authority figure. According to Kristen Fescoe, a publisher of the Online Psychology Degree Guide, the Milgram experiment is one of the 25 most influential psychological experiments in history because of its enduring impact in the psychological community. This essay reveals what the experiment was for and how it affected the world.
In 1961 Stanley Milgram put an ad in the newspapers and sent direct mail. He was looking for 40 males between the ages 20-50, from New Haven, Connecticut, to participate in a learning study conducted at Yale University. These participants job ranged from plumbing to a corporate business owner and their education ranged from those who were elementary school dropouts to people with higher college degrees such as Masters or PhD. The participants were told that it was just a memory activity that involved the relationship between punishment and learning. For participating in this experiment, they would get paid $4.50. The real objective of the experiment was to see if a person would do as their authority figure told them to even if it meant causing someone else harm. Stanley Milgram

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