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    Obedience

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    Society’s Tendency to Pass on Responsibility The Obedience to Authority Experiment of Stanley Milgram is one of the most studied experiments in American history due to its wide-ranging social implications. The study gained popular attention because it aimed to provide some insight as to why the Holocaust had escalated in such a way. The study was designed around testing the degree of inflicted pain strangers would give to others‚ under orders by an experimenter. Not only did the study defy what

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    The book Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment by James Patterson is about six kids named Max‚ Fang‚ Iggy‚ Gazzy‚ Nudge‚ and Angel. They call themselves the flock because they all have bird genes in their DNA; and they all have wings and can fly. They got the genes from a place called the School. The School is a place where scientists create mutants. Four years ago the flock escaped with the help of one of the scientists there‚ Jeb Batchelder. Two years after their escape‚ Jeb disappears and everyone

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    Stanley Milgram was an American social psychologist whose research has been justified because of the knowledge psychologists have gained about why people obey. One of his most famous studies was conducted in 1963 on obedience. Obedience is compliance with an order‚ request‚ or law or submission to another’s authority. Milgram wanted to investigate why the German soldiers were very obedient to their authority figures and superiors and if that is an explanation for their mass killings in World War

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    Obidience

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    shock the experimenter would sternly order them to continue with the experiment. The experimenter‚ who was the authority figure in the experiment used a number of verbal prompts to encourage the participants to continue with the experiment. After the experiment had been done the participants were fully interrogated on what Milgram’s true intention was and followed up a year later to check on their psychological states. Milgram remarkably found that 100% of the participants administered electric

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    milgram's report

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    person a man is as the kind of situation in which he finds himself that determines how he will act." –Stanley Milgram‚ (1974) This report is about obedience to authority which will take you into Milgram’s experiment and how this study applies to trainee police officers. The following experiment was designed to test obedience to authority conducted by the psychologist Stanley Milgram in 1961. He was motivated by the Jewish genocide in the second world war and tried to answer the question "Could

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    Stanley Milgram Obedience

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    psychological and physiological harm to the participants. This essay aims to discuss the Stanley Milgram obedience to authority experiment and how it relates to the

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    research into obedience over the years has enabled us to understand more about the human mind than ever before. When experiments are conducted‚ the aim is to demonstrate cause and effect relationships between the independent and dependant variables‚ usually in order to make generalising statements about people. A well known study into obedience is the Milgram experimentMilgram had a found interest in why during the Second World War hundreds of people obeyed the orders of others in authority

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    there are heroes around when in fact‚ yes they are around‚ but they are a quickly dying breed. My conclusion is that by uniting everyone and seeing each other as another human life regardless of being anonymous or not that maybe experiments like the Stanford experiment might not have needed to be done. Phillip Zimbardo’s‚ You Can’t be a Sweet Cucumber in a Vinegar Barrel has many valid points. The first point that could be considered obvious is the question that he prose’s is‚ “Why do good people

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    Social Psychology Week 6 Writing Assignment 1: Question 1 of 1: | | | Theoretical Perspectives on Gender Introduction: A local college is organizing a seminar on gender bias in the workplace. You have been invited to the seminar as a guest lecturer. You have been specifically requested to deliver a lecture on the different perspectives of gender‚ including biology‚ socialization‚ and social roles. Task: Prepare an outline for the lecture‚ including notes on different perspectives

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    out such a horrific ordeal? Yale psychologist Stanley Milgram created an experiment that attempts to prove that evil can exist in what we would consider "normal" people. Milgram‚ wanted to see the extreme measures one would go to when a higher power of authority delivered an order. Milgram simulated an electric chair which an actor was told to pretend to act out in pain when a student was told to deliver current in to the chair. The experiment was for the student to shock the actor in the chair every

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