The Milgram Experiment Essay

Words: 698
Pages: 3

The Milgram Experiment was done in order to determine if good people were willing to do bad things to the innocent, just because they were being told by an authority figure. Stanley Milgram conducted this obedience experiment in 1961 in order to justify the reasoning behind tragic events. Such as, the holocaust in World War II. The goal was to see how far people would go in harming another individual. This experiment was told to be a learning experiment to the participants.
The volunteer was paired up with an accomplice of Milgram. They drew straws to conclude who would be the learner and the teacher. The draw was fixed so the accomplice of Milgram would always be the learner. In the room there was also a man wearing a lab coat performing as the experimenter. The learner, Mr. Wallace, was sitting in an electric chair, while the teacher was in another room with the experimenter, controlling the electric shock generator. The learner was given a list of word pairs to learn before being tested by the teacher.
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False data, results, and methods should be avoided. Being bias when it comes to anything to do with an experiment has to do with a lack of ethical guidelines. All personal wants and beliefs should stay concealed. Being respectful towards others involved in the experiment is important, as well as, giving credit to who it is due. Plagiarism is something to stay away from at all times. Confidentiality, is a major key when dealing with others personnel records or any type of confidential information.
In Milgram’s Experiment there are a lack of ethical guidelines. The participants that are used as teachers are being tricked. They believe they are shocking someone when in fact, the shocks are fake. The participants were also not taken care of. Many of them had anxiety, shaking, including three participants who had seizures from the stressful position they were put in. Many even begged to stop the