The Milgram Experiment: Obedience to Authority
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The Milgram Experiment: Obedience to Authority

The Milgram Experiment: Obedience to Authority

Stanley Milgram's shocking experiment reveals how far people obey authority, sparking debate and reshaping psychology.

Chapter 1

A World Asking Why

1:10

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly did Stanley Milgram's obedience experiment involve and how was it conducted?

Stanley Milgram's experiment involved participants who believed they were teaching word pairs to a learner in another room. When the learner gave wrong answers, an authority figure instructed participants to administer increasingly severe electric shocks using a shock generator with switches labeled from 15 to 450 volts. The learner was actually an actor who wasn't receiving real shocks, but participants didn't know this.

What percentage of people completed Stanley Milgram's shock experiment despite the apparent suffering?

Approximately 65% of participants in Milgram's original experiment continued to administer shocks all the way to the maximum 450-volt level, despite hearing the learner's screams and pleas to stop. This result shocked Milgram and the scientific community, as experts had predicted that only a tiny fraction of people would comply with such extreme instructions.

Why was Stanley Milgram's obedience experiment considered ethically controversial?

The experiment was controversial because participants experienced extreme psychological distress, believing they were seriously harming another person. Many participants showed signs of tension, sweating, and nervous laughter during the procedure. The experiment also involved deception, as participants weren't told the true nature of the study, raising questions about informed consent and psychological harm to research subjects.

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