Prison Experiment Philip Zimbardo

Words: 502
Pages: 3

During the summer of 1971, young people were protesting the Vietnam War, and expressing their feelings about the war thru demonstrations and protests. That is when Philip Zimbardo, a Psychology Professor began his experiment to see how prisoners and guards could be transform with impulses and shape their behavior. The experiment was a two week trail and the participants, were given physical and mental backgrounds to be sure they were suitable to be a participant. The experiment was a psychological and humiliating trail to see how prison guards and inmates were mental affected. First the prisoners where given the impression that they had committed a crime of armed robbery and burglary. Once they were picked up from their homes and brought to their cells they were strip down from their clothes, deloused, and given uniforms that resemble a women’s dress. At this time they were identified by numbers and not their real names, as they wore rubber sandals and were chain from the ankles. Prisoner #8612 was the ring leader out of the participants was one of the revels and the prison guards had to make a point to make sure they were in charge. Their task was to wake them up from their sleep to clean …show more content…
The experiment describe how in many ways guards and prisoners when put into an environment can behave in alarming ways. Once the participants live the prison concept it reveal how ethical values were brought out by human beings and how humans change when face with different norms outside their comfort zone. Ethical values, morals, and issues where all put in use by the participants as this experiment encompass the reality of how humans behave when put in different situations. Experiments like this brings out the good and evil morals experience during their normal life