This citation from Stanley Milgram (1974, p. 205) explains the subject on the subject. Submission has been studied in famous submission experiments of Milgram. In the case of recent events like the Holocaust (Mastroianni, 2000) and (My Lai) during World War II, therefore evidence of atrocities. ). This article explains both sides of the discussion while discussing the situation and personal factors that affect people's behavior in a particular way.
Outline of Milgram's submission experiment and its related ethical problems. Before explaining Milgram's experimental overview, this article focuses on Milgram itself. Stanley Milgram was born in New York in 1933. He graduated from Queen's University and Harvard University, taught social psychology at Yale University and Harvard University, then became an Emeritus Professor at the New York City University Graduate Center. (Zimbardo, Milgram submission study seems experimental
Milgram's obedience experiment (1963) against the number of authorities is a series of social psychology experiments conducted by Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram. These experiments measured whether research participants are willing to comply with the authority figures they are instructing to perform actions that are inconsistent with their personal conscience. For the experiment, "teachers" who conducted the experiment, participants, and allies who pretended to be volunteers participated. Allies are people who pretend to participate in the experiment but participate in the research. Participants believe that their roles are randomly assigned
The Milgram experiment was the name of the 1961 experiment conducted by American psychologist Stanley Milgram. In the experiment, Milgram had an authoritative ordered research participant who committed a disturbing behavior that hurt others. After the experiment he revealed that he cheated the participants and that they did not harm anyone, but the research participants were uncomfortable with the experience of participating in the study. The experiment led to extensive discussion of research ethics to recruit participants, but they did not provide complete information about the nature of the study.