Milgram Experiment Essay

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    Stanley Milgram conducted an experiment to find out how far people would go in obeying instructions if it included harming another person. This experiment was also trying to prove how easily an ordinary person could be influenced into committing atrocities such as the Nazi killings in World War II (McLeod, 2007). The experiment was first advertised in the newspaper to look for male participants for the experiment and they were paid $4.50 for participating the experiment which were conducted at

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    The Milgram Experiment is one of the most famous studies in psychology. It was carried out by Stanley Milgram, a psychologist from Yale University. The purpose of the experiment was to study how far people would go in obeying an instruction from an authority figure if it involved hurting another person. Milgram wanted to study whether Germans were more obedient to authority as this was what people believed was the main reason for Nazi killings in World War II. 40 males were chosen to participate

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    the noteworthy experiments Milgram (1963) and Haney, Banks, and Zimbardo (1973) has advanced our understanding of power and obedience by highlighting the significant influence of social situations on personal behaviour. However, as many subsequent experiments on power and obedience have produced similar findings yet with a greater regard to ethical principles and minimising risk to participants, the risks to participants were only necessary to a small extent. Further, these experiments were conducted

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    Essay on The Milgram Experiment

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    The Milgram Experiment (Hart) Stanley Milgram’s experiment in the way people respond to obedience is one of the most important experiments ever administered. The goal of Milgram’s experiment was to find the desire of the participants to shock a learner in a controlled situation. When the volunteer would be ordered to shock the wrong answers of the victims, Milgram was truly judging and studying how people respond to authority. Milgram discovered something both troubling and awe inspiring about the

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    start introducing the experiments that Milgram did, Lauren made it if I was the one who was experimented on. I also mentioned that I like how she made the reader become mice to understand the experiment last week. I believe this is going to be a common recurring theme within this book since it helps me to understand the chapter that I’m reading. The Milgram experiment is something interesting to test out, and also ethically wrong to do in my opinion. It’s interesting that Milgram wants to test out if

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    psychologist, “obedience to authority” at Yale University, Stanley Milgram (1963) was

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    (Unethical?) Milgram Experiment The Milgram experiment was an experiment that took place in 1961 at Yale University, created by Stanley Milgram. The experiment was conducted to test the public's obedience to authority, especially in circumstances in which they are told to participate in activities that are clearly wrong. In this experiment, subjects were told that they were to be administering shocks to another subject. This subject happened to be not a subject at all, but an actor. As the experiment went

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    Journal 7 In class are shown the Milgram experiment which was an enforcer telling the teacher to shock the learner if the learner did not get what the learner was supposed to memorize exactly right the learner got shocked. In this study the learner was in no real harm because he was an actor but this experiment showed about 65% of people will kill someone if instructed to do so. Milgram was trying to understand why normal people in Germany would kill so many Jews. Milgram's results from this study

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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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    A particular experiment that I found intriguing so far in this class was “The Milgram Experiment,” which was conducted by psychologist Stanley Milgram in 1963. The whole experiment was based around obedience, particularly the conflict between obedience as related to authority and a person’s inner conscience (McLeod). Milgram got the idea for the study after the Nuremburg War Criminals trial since many of the ones that were being tried claimed to just be following orders from a higher authority (McLeod)

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