An Ethical Experiment In The Case Of The Stanford Prison Experiment

1024 Words3 Pages

Tiantian Li
WR100 K2
Paper1 Draft
Feb 6th 2016
An Ethical Experiment Human wisdom has granted us the power of making decisions of our own and judging decisions of other people’s. But how do we justify what we do and evaluate other people’s actions? Based on different perspectives and ethical values we can come to different conclusions about the same subject. Nonetheless, there is always a better argument for ethics according to one theory compare to others. In the case of the Stanford Prison Experiment, despite the majority critical opinions, it should still be considered as an ethical experiment based on consequentialism’s perspective.
In order to investigate the psychological effect in a prison environment, psychologist Phillip Zimbardo …show more content…

Whether Zimbardo’s experiment is ethical or not is completely determined by what kind of person he is. People with good values do ethical things and people without those traits do unethical things. Deontology on the other hand, emphasizes on the morality of intentions behind actions and the processes during actions. An action is unethical when it is not played by the rules or laws. For consequentialism, individuals do not matter to the ethical justification for a decision nor do the actions themselves. As long as the benefits of a result outweigh the costs, the action is considered ethical. Compare to the circular nature of virtue ethics and the rigid nature of deontology, consequentialism is the least complicated and easiest ethical basis to apply. Therefore, out of all three of these ethical theories, consequentialism is the most practical one. So by evaluating the results and consequences, we can argue that the Stanford Prison Experiment is …show more content…

America had been troubled by its prison dynamic long before the experiment took place. The general sadistic personalities found on prison guards were confusing and overwhelming. Since people tend to attribute changes in behaviors or any behavior at all to internal factors, this prison phenomenon was poorly understood. However, the results of the Stanford Prison Experiment clearly demonstrate that people are clearly subject to their surrounding environment. Even if it contradicts to our day-to-day characteristics, we can still easily pick up the social roles they are expected to play, especially when it comes to roles that are strongly stereotypical like prison characters. Our individuality can be defined by the social environment and since these expectations all come from the external environments, the experiment shows how big an effect the environment has on our individual behaviors, even able to of negate our steady moral and behavioral guidelines. Because of this study, the brutality reported among guards in American prisons was explained. People started to understand that the situation wasn’t caused by a shared genetic defect among these guards but rather by the hostile prison environment. This realization is crucial to America’s judicial system. In the bloody revolts took place in San Quentin and Attica shortly after the Stanford Prison Experiment, the results from this study greatly

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