Table of Contents
- 1 Should the Milgram experiment have been allowed?
- 2 What were the criticisms of Milgram’s research?
- 3 What ethical guidelines did Milgram break?
- 4 What did Milgram’s study teach us?
- 5 What ethical guideline in research was broken in Stanley Milgram’s Classic Obedience Study?
- 6 What does the Milgram experiment suggest about human nature?
Should the Milgram experiment have been allowed?
At the time, the Milgram experiment ethics seemed reasonable, but by the stricter controls in modern psychology, this experiment would not be allowed today. Modern ethical standards assert that participants in any experiment must not be deceived, and that they must be made aware of any consequences.
What were the criticisms of Milgram’s research?
The modern criticisms include: When a participant hesitated in applying electric shocks, the actor playing the role of experimenter was meant to stick to a script of four escalating verbal “prods”. In fact, he frequently improvised, inventing his own terms and means of persuasion.
What was one major ethical issue with Stanley Milgram’s experiment?
The ethical issues involved with the Milgram experiment are as follows: deception, protection of participants involved, and the right to withdrawal. The experiment was deemed unethical, because the participants were led to believe that they were administering shocks to real people.
Did Milgram break ethical guidelines?
Milgram’s study has been heavily criticised for breaking numerous ethical guidelines, including: deception, right to withdraw and protection from harm.
What ethical guidelines did Milgram break?
What did Milgram’s study teach us?
Milgram (1974) explained the behavior of his participants by suggesting that people have two states of behavior when they are in a social situation: The autonomous state – people direct their own actions, and they take responsibility for the results of those actions.
What ethics did Milgram break?
Why did Milgram use deception?
Deception – the participants actually believed they were shocking a real person and were unaware the learner was a confederate of Milgram’s. However, Milgram argued that “illusion is used when necessary in order to set the stage for the revelation of certain difficult-to-get-at-truths.”
What ethical guideline in research was broken in Stanley Milgram’s Classic Obedience Study?
What does the Milgram experiment suggest about human nature?
Milgram summarized his findings: Ordinary people, simply doing their jobs, and without any particular hostility on their part, can become agents in a terrible destructive process. The experiment has been repeated many times, by Milgram and others, with similar results.
Was the bystander effect ethical?
Some psychological experiments that were designed to test the bystander effect are considered unethical by today’s standards. The studies became progressively unethical by putting participants at risk of psychological harm.
Why was the Milgram experiment so controversial?
In his book published in 1974 Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View, Milgram argued that the ethical criticism provoked by his experiments was because his findings were disturbing and revealed unwelcome truths about human nature.