How To Evaluate Milgram's Experiments

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Stanley Milgram conducted this study to determine the extent to which humans will follow the orders given by someone who holds authority over them. The study was also used to determine if people would obey those in power even when what was being asked of them could be considered unethical. Milgram and psychology majors who were informed about the experiment in question predicted that most people would go against what was being asked of them, and that very few would reach the end of the allotted punishment (the electric shocks). Clearly, this research design was an experiment. The research took place in a controlled environment and had both a control group and an experimental group where the researchers were able to manipulate their independent …show more content…

All the men who participated were between the ages of 20 and 50 and were from various backgrounds in terms of education level as well as employment. There was also someone who played the role of the experimenter during the experiment. Milgram had the participants assume the role of a teacher (participants being those who were being deceived as to the true nature of the experiment and not those who were already in the loop), asking questions of a “learner” and administering electric shocks of increasing voltage for every wrong answer. Shockingly, the voltage eventually surpassed survivable levels. In the end, Milgram found that the majority of people complied to what was being asked of them by the authority figure, despite the fact that the command went against his or her personal values and could objectively be regarded as immoral. Even more surprising was the fact that he found that the subjects complied even though no harm would come to them if they disobeyed. This led him to conclude that humans are very likely to obey the commands given by an authority figure, and this result is further enforced by the setting the situation occurs

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