Stanley Milgram Essay

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    Stanley Milgram

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    Individual Programmatic Assessment: Exploring a Classic Study in Social Psychology Daryl Bonelli Psych/620 January 25th, 2016 Colleen Story Individual Programmatic Assessment: Exploring a Classic Study in Social Psychology Introduction Norman Chomsky once wrote “I think it only makes sense to seek out and identify structures of authority, hierarchy, and domination in every aspect of life, and to challenge them; unless a justification for them can be given, they are illegitimate, and

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    A standout amongst the most renowned investigations of compliance in brain research was done by Stanley Milgram (Myers 499). Stanley Milgram was a therapist at Yale University, directed an analysis concentrating on the contention between acquiescence to power and individual still, small voice. He analyzed avocations for demonstrations of genocide offered by those blamed at the World War II, Nuremberg War Criminal trials (Myers 499). Their resistance regularly depended on "submission" - that they

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    Stanley Milgram was a psychologist at Yale University who was interested in the levels of obedience people shown to an authority figure. Obedience is a type of social influence whereby somebody acts in response to a direct order from another person, it is defined as ‘’compliance with commands given by an authority figure’’. (LLC, 2016). Milgram studied obedience in 1963 by carrying out a laboratory experiment, Milgram wanted to test the idea that ‘’German’s are different’’ as the Germans obeyed Hitler’s

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    command, and therefore, no longer views himself responsible for his actions. Excessive obedience can lead to a harmful situation that can result to the Nazi’s atrocities. Stanley Milgram wrote an article “Obedience to Authority” with a reference to Nazi Germany and how transferring the responsibility played a role during holocaust. Milgram experiment shows us that ordinary people will most likely to conform to an authority figure, to the extent of hurting others. Adolf Eichmann is an example of authority

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    Stanley Milgram Impact

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    Milgram has an enduring impact. His work has influenced society, though his work was incomplete. In “What Makes a Person a Perpetrator? The Intellectual, Moral, and Methodological Arguments for Revisiting Milgram’s Research on the Influence of Authority” by S. Gibson, he discusses other factors overlooked in Milgram’s experiments and demonstrates certain points through the Adolf Eichmann. While Eichmann was on trial for his crimes in WWII, at Yale, Milgram was leading studies. He owed a lot of his

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    Milgram Experiment Stanley Milgram created a series of psychological experiments that studied the extent of a human beings willingness to obey an authority figure who informed them to commits acts not in correspondence with their own personal beliefs. Milgram started the experiments because he was intrigued by the German Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, who many believed that he and his troops were just following orders. The experiments have been tried with various societies and countries. The

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    Milgram Assignment I. In 1962, Stanley Milgram, a Social Relations professor at Yale University conducted an experiment on the internal struggle between a person’s innate obedience to authority and their standards of morality. Milgram was intrigued by former Nazi officers justifying their horrific actions with the excuse that they were merely following orders. Milgram’s experiment, heavily reliant on unknowing participants, recruited 40 male individuals aged 20-50 years old--with a preference for

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    Essay on Stanley Milgram

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    This quote, by Stanley Milgram (1974, p. 205), exemplifies the debate that exists around the topic of obedience. Obedient behaviours have been studied in Milgram’s famous obedience experiments, and evidence of atrocities being carried out as a result of obedience can be seen in situations such as the holocaust in World War Two (Mastroianni, 2000) and more recent events such as (My Lai). This essay will explain both sides of the debate, arguing for situation and individual factors that influence people

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    In July 1961, Stanley Milgram began to conduct an experiment to test human obedience at Yale University. He wanted to see how German Nazis could inflict the extermination of the Jewish population, and to see how much pain they would inflict on another person just by giving instructions. Milgram put an ad in the newspaper and he got forty males volunteers between the ages of twenty and fifty. He would choose one of the volunteers and an actor who went by the name Mr. Wallace. They would draw a slip

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    In 1963, Stanley Milgram of Yale University conducted a behavioral study on destructive obedience. Researchers hypothesized that obedience to authority figures is an engrained behavior that can override an individual’s ethics, sympathies, and moral conduct. The experiment was designed to investigate what degree of obedience subjects would display when instructed by an authority figure to inflict pain and harmful punishment (via electric shock) on another person. In this study, the subjects were told

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