Milgram Experiment Essay

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    early stage of their life they are trained to follow orders from an authority figure. Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at Yale University, conducted an experiment focusing on the conflict between obedience to authority and personal conscience. Milgram was trying to show that people are more likely to obey orders when it comes from a higher authority figure even when it involves many immoral acts. The experiment involve a teacher who will give electric shock to a learner when he gives wrong answer. 65

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    The Milgram Obedience Experiment is very interesting experiment. Inspired by the Nuremberg trials, Milgram’s experiment studied how far someone would hurt a man when under the sight of authority. 65% of the participants continued regardless of the pain felt by the ”student”, who actually was an actor. This experiment taught us a lot about the herd mentality of humans. Once the “herd” is convinced that the ideology is good they feel obligated regardless of what they feel. We think that the higher

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    What did Stanley Milgram seek to test in his experiments at Yale University? Milgram was interested in researching to see how far people would go to obey and instruction if it meant harming another person even if they disagreed with it. The main point was to see if for example normal/regular people were capable of the monstrosities that happened in WWII by the Germans. The learner was a person that was supposed to learn a specific behavior and if he got the answer wrong then the teacher was supposed

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    Milgram Experiment Research Paper In 1961, Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at Yale University, conducted a controversial experiment on the conflict between obedience to authority and personal conscience. He examined the justifications for acts of genocide given by those accused at the World War II Nuremberg War Criminal trials. Their defense often was based on "obedience,” and that they were “just following orders from their superiors” (McLeod, Saul. Milgram Experiment, Simply Psychology). The procedure

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    Stanley Milgram’s experiment in the 1960’s focused on the obedience of people from a higher authority. Milgram was influenced by the Holocaust, but was interested more in the trial of Adolf Eichmann. Eichmann was a German Nazi, whose job was to deport Jews to ghettos and extermination camps during World War II. He was captured in 1960 and charged with facilitating and managing deportation of Jews. His trial was widely publicized in Israel, where he told his story and that the only reason he proceed

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    a position of power from being normal to crazed. In the milgram experiment uses students from yale university were used to show a relation between position of power and being evil, the experiment showed that there was a relation. Saul Mcleod conveys through the article "THE MILGRAM EXPERIMENT" that people put in positions of power, are more likely to be cruel to the people they are in power of. The other experiment the stanford experiment was to see how many people would kill another person when

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    Almost five decades later, Stanley Milgrams famous study of obedience to authority is by far one of the most known and talked about psychological experiments of the twentieth century. Milgram’s ground-breaking research showed participants a side of them that not only shocked them but also brought the world of psychology to a standstill. Milgram’s renowned study where he asked several participants to administer voltage shocks to ‘learners’ behind a screen was one of the most famous research studies

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    The Milgram experiment fascinates me on the idea that people are easily willing to obey an authoritative, because they are seen as more powerful. The experimenter asked the teacher whether if there was anything that the learner could have said to make the teacher stop the experiment. The teacher replied nothing, even though he was genuinely concerned for the learner. This experiment proves how an authoritative figure can easily control innocent civilians into doing activity that they would not otherwise

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    the participants continued to at least 300 volts (McLeod). From the results, Milgram concluded that ordinary people are likely to follow the orders of an authority figure, even to the extent of killing an innocent human being (Velasquez). Milgram was intrigued by the results and wanted to further understand what caused the subjects to obey the “experimenter's” orders. He crafted up numerous ways to change the experiment including changing the location to a less prestigious place, swapping out the

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    are going to talk why this is true and what social phycologist have done to understand this behavior. We will analyze the most famous experiments and see what the results were. We will also see how that behavior still apply in this modern day era. The two experiments that I will focus on is the Milgram Experiment and the Asch Experiment. Both of these experiments will show different ways of how compliance and conformity is shown in action. We will see what each did to reveal what people will do in

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