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    Mahmoud ibrahim Esl 400/Final Draft 10/26/2017 Google and Its effects Many years ago, people used to spend so much time trying to look up information through libraries, newspaper and books. However, since the evolution of the Internet started, everything has changed. Nowadays people rely on the internet or Google for almost everything, but is this considered a good thing or a bad thing? Well, that’s where the controversy erupts. Some people believe that Google is making us stupid, while others

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    Cisco incorporated has grown significantly over the years, since its inception and has established itself as the number one technology company throughout the industry. Initially Cisco started as manufacturers of modems and routers and has expanded its scope over the years. This paper will attempt to address Cisco’s operations and strategies in foreign markets it will also delve into the strengths, weaknesses and threats in the political, legal and economic environment in which it operates. Cisco

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    In the opening lines of A Man for All Seasons by Robert Bolt, the Common Man proclaims, “It is perverse! To start a play made up of Kings and Cardinals in speaking costumes and intellectuals with embroidered mouths, with me” (3). The Common Man cannot believe that Bolt is choosing to start off a play of Kings and Cardinals with a man such as himself. He does not believe he, a Common Man, is worthy of this role. Within these opening lines the reader is faced with a question, why did Bolt chose to

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    while the gap between whites and collective blacks does not shrink. The authors argue that in group versus out group hostilities will lessen between the whites and honorary whites, however this will only increase their in group size compared to the out group of the collective blacks and only create new tensions while strengthening old ones between these two groups. This will be because the collective blacks will feel more segregated from their lighter skinned counterparts. This type of grouping will

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    Both the Stanford and Holocaust experiments are psychological experiments that were conducted in order to realize the behavior of the prisoners and the prison guards when they are in prison and the kind of psychological and physical treatments that the guards offer to the prisoners. The Stanford prison experiment took place in the year 1971. In this experiment young men were used whereby, they were divided into the roles if the guards and the prisoners. Both were put in an environment that resembles

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    3. What did we learn from the Stanford Prison Experiment? Include issues of ethics and methodology? Can the findings be generalised beyond this experiment? Background + Introduction: What was the Stanford Prison experiment, give details as to what the experiment was: The Stanford Prison Experiment was conceived by Phillip Zimbardo with the aim of the Experiment being to observe and analyse the psychological effects of becoming a prisoner or a prison guard. The experiment was funded by the United

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    In 1971, Dr Zimbardo created a make-shift prison in the basement of Stanford University where students were subjected to various kinds of unethical treatments under the premise of scientific or psychological validity (Shuttleworth, 2008). The aim of this experiment was to investigate the psychological effects with becoming either a prisoner or a guard in a simulated condition (Zollman, 2012). This study became known as the Stanford Prison Experiment. This assignment will explore the concept, findings

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    Summary of the Stanford Prison Experiment. The stanford prison experiment is an investigation of how people will adhere to the cliché prisoner and guard roles in a simulated prison. According to Stanford Prison Experiment. Retrieved from https://www.dowellwebtools.com/tools/lp/Bo/psyched/17/Stanford_Prison_Experiment Philip Zimbardo the head researcher and acting prison warden says, "The purpose [of the experiment] was to understand the development of norms and the effects of roles, labels, and

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    chose the topic of prison psychology with a focus on the Stanford prison experiment and the psychological effects of systematic abuse. Zimbardo, Philip G. "Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment: A Lesson in the Power of Situation." The Chronicle of Higher Education, no. 30, 2007. EBSCOhost, ezproxy.uhd.edu/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edsgbc&AN=edsgcl.161992127&site=eds-live&scope=site. The Stanford Prison Experiment was a study on the psychological effects

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    the most important issues today. The Stanford Prison Experiment, conducted over 40 years ago, brought these ethical issues into the limelight and remains one of the most controversial studies in the history of studying human behavior. This paper aims to define ethics, describe risk/benefit ratio, provide a brief background on the Stanford Prison Experiment, and evaluate the impact it has had on psychological research.   The Stanford Prison Experiment The Stanford Prison Experiment probably tops a lot

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