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Stanley Milgram's Experiment

Decent Essays

Milgram’s Experiment Yale University Psychologist, Stanley Milgram (1963) demonstrated an experiment called the Milgram's experiment. It was meant to be about the study of obedience and what people would do when others were in pain, demand to stop the experiment or continue following orders. It took place in 1961 a year after world war II, Milgram wanted to make inquires about obedience and if that was the reason for the nazi killings, due to the Germans listening to their orders no matter what the situation was. "Could it be that Eichmann and his million accomplices in the Holocaust were just following orders? Could we call them all accomplices?" (Milgram, 1974). Milgram chose 2 participants at a time one was a teacher and the other would be the learner the teacher would …show more content…

Milgram felt that it was because they were being obedient and following orders, as they did with the experiment the ones that kept going felt bad but did not stop because the instructor would tell them they must go on, While the others would completely stop what they were doing and demand to stop the experiment even if it meant they wouldn't get paid. In the Milgram's experiment 1961 original video one of the participants, Jeroen Busscher, went through the whole 30 switches of shock generator, he would tell the instructor that someone should probrally check on the learner, the instructor told him the same thing he told the others,"please continue, the experiment requires you to continue, It is absolutely essential that you continue, and you have no other choice but to continue." Busscher didn't stop he kept going until the end, milgram stopped the experiment and asked busscher how he felt, He would blame it on the instructor and would talk about how scared he was for the learner, Milgram suggested he would just blame it on

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