Experiment Essay

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    “The Experiment” and “The Stanford Experiment” are two experiments that showed that when some people get authority they tend go mindless. These experiments was set to investigate the psychological factors of power which included inmates and prisoners in a prison setting. The movie “The Experiment” is based on “The Stanford Experiment”. The experiment did not last as long, because of the extreme violence. Many people that is rewarded higher authority sometimes reflects who they are. The two experiments

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    Stanford Prison Experiment In 1971, an experiment was conducted by Dr. Philip Zimbardo, Professor of Psychology at Stanford University, along with his under-graduate assistants Craig Haney and Curtis Banks. The experiment was to study the basic psychological understanding of the mind for both prisoners and guards in a stimulated prison setting. The experiment would consist of a group of students who agreed to participate in a two week study with an incentive of fifteen dollars a day. There

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment was conducted by Dr. Philip Zimbardo of the Stanford psychology department in the summer of 1971. The goal of the experiment was to witness how power and control – or lack thereof – can affect the behavior and personality of an individual in a group setting (specifically in a prison environment). It was also meant to display how roles, labels, and social expectations might affect such a situation. While the experiment was originally intended to last for fourteen

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    have had participate as a guard in the Stanford prison experiment I do not think I would be able to be as cruel as the men from the experiment were. I personally believe that regardless my job or my position I would not let people suffer. However at the end of the documentary the men that acted as guards of the prison said that they were so into their role that they took it very seriously; they completely forgot that it was just an experiment. Moreover the “guards” admit they enjoyed having the power

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    The Stanford Prison experiment was terminated of August 20, 1971 only 6 days after it began. The experiment was destined to fail because the psychologist Philip Zimbardo failed to follow the APA’s ethical guideline. Dr. Zimbardo put himself in the experiment causing him to be unaware of his responsibilities to the community he worked in. Zimbardo and the correctional officers also violated the Justice and respect for people's rights and dignity. The guards were given too much power and instead of

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    The Similarities Between the Stanford Prison Experiment and the Holocaust “Cruelty is all out of ignorance. If you knew what was in store for you, you wouldn’t hurt anybody, because whatever you do comes back much more forceful than you sent it out.” (Willie Nelson). The Stanford Prison Experiment was extremely similar to the concentration camps of the Holocaust in many was however the one think that that makes then similar was the fact that they were both extremely cruel and dehumanized people

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    Summary 1 Lerner, Gonzalez, Small and Fischhoff (2003) undertook an experiment to study the effects of fear and anger on perceived threats of terrorism. The design of the experiment was a national field study. To acquire a nationally representative sample of American’s, the researchers drew a random sample of 1786 people, aged 13-88, from Knowledge Networks nationally representative panel. These people were randomly assigned to complete a survey and numerous psychosocial scales. The two psychosocial

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    Kevin Ong Ms. Averill JLA-2 21 May 2017 The Stanford Prison Experiment The Stanford Prison Experiment was definitely one of the most notorious experiments that ever occurred. It was an experiment to see what the students would do given their position as guards or prisoners. The experiment was funded by the government. They recruited the 24 male students and offered them fifteen dollars a day for two weeks. They flipped a coin to see who would be guards and prisoners. It started on August 14 at Stanford

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    American prisons. The study that we would perform is like the controversial and infamous Stanford Prison experiment which was conducted by Philip Zimbardo in the summer of 1971 and is still being talked about today. The study was meant to show how the “power of anonymity to unleash violent behavior,” (Zimbardo 1971) would

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    The Stanford Prison Experiment was performed to observe the behavioral and psychological consequences of being a prisoner or guard. More specifically the experiment was performed to see whether people would conform to the roles of being a prison guard and a prisoner. This experiment was to help understand how positions of power and the expected norm would affect the subjects in a prison environment. The psychologist also wanted to know whether violence by guards is due to their personalities or

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