Obedience, by Ian Parker and Review of Stanley Milgram’s Experiments on Obedience, by Diana Baumrind

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Stanley Milgram, a social psychologist in 1963, conducted an experiment about human obedience that was deemed as one of the most controversial social psychology experiments ever (Blass). The original intent of the experiment was to determine if the Germans during WWII were simply obeying to authority when carrying out the Holocaust. The test subject, or teacher, would administer electric shocks to the learner, a paid actor, when he incorrectly answered the word pairings. The shocks started at 15v and went up by 15v increments up to 450v for every wrong answer. The teacher thought the learner was receiving electric shocks when in reality the learner was not receiving any shocks. An instructor, the authoritative figure, was sitting behind the teacher instructing the teacher to continue even when the learner cried out in pain. Sixty-five percent of the time, the teacher continued until he administered the highest shock at 450v (Cherry). This experiment proves that when under the right circumstances society will obey authority. Ian Parker, a writer for the New Yorker, and Diana Baumrind, a psychologist at the University of California Berkeley, responded to Mr. Milgram’s experiments with direct responses of their own. These articles represent how the scientific community reviews and scrutinizes each other’s work to authenticate the experiments results. Baumrind focuses on the moral and ethical dilemma while on the contrary Parker focuses more on the application of the actual experiment. Diana Baumrind thinks of Milgram’s experiment more of a ‘game’ then an actual scientific experiment (Baumrind 225). She claims that Milgram left no ‘out’ for the subject (226). Baumrind also thinks that Milgram did not care enough about the well-bein... ... middle of paper ... ...lgram should have offered physiatrist or therapy to the patients after participating in the experiment. Parker devises one simple statement for the problem, “ Works Cited Baumrind, Diana. “Review of Stanley Milgram’s Experiments on Obedience.” Writing & Reading for ACP Composition. Eds. Thomas E. Leahey and Christine R. Farris. New York: Pearson Custom Publishing, 2009. 230-240. Print. Blass, Thomas. "The Man Who Shocked The World." Psychology Today: Health, Help, Happiness. Sussex Publishers, LLC, 1 Mar. 2001. Web. 10 Oct. 2011. Cherry, Kendra. "The Milgram Obedience Experiment." Psychology for Students, Educators & Enthusiasts. New York Times. Web. 3 Sept. 2008. 11 Oct. 2011 Parker, Ian. “Obedience.” Writing & Reading for ACP Composition. Eds. Thomas E. Leahey and Christine R. Farris. New York: Pearson Custom Publishing, 2009. 224-229. Print.

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