Stanford Prison Experiment Part (1-2)

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Uploaded by on May 4, 2011

Stanford Prison Experiment a social experiment of authority

All rights go to BBC british broadcasting corporation

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Education

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Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 3 dislikes

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  • @jbrown1169 You need someone's consent to do something like this. And for that to happen you need them to know the details. Just because they were treating it like a game doesn't make things any better. Wouldn't it make it worse because if they were a criminal, it would be easier to justify. The point is that good people can do bad things. And that's what happened.

  • @canucmesucker Most would say this wasn't ethical either. I don't think that lying about the students being criminals/guards would be that unethical, I consider it more of a control. It would keep those involved from thinking it was a big game, which was the overall problem, at least from the guards side. Eschelman likely wouldn't have decided to run "his own experiments" if he thought that these weren't just students like him. It would be a lie (much like a placebo) but a harmless one.

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  • This proves that ethics change over time. 

  • Nice Video That You Share , So Very Nice Thanks You Stanford Prison Experiment a social experiment of authority

  • @legolasl2740 ohhh ya you damn right :P blonde, nice beautiful blue eyes , cool teacher :D

  • I Really Like The Video From Your Stanford Prison Experiment a social experiment of authority

  • @oliskies1 natalie carlino?? really hot blonde? :P

  • @legolasl2740 hahah i have same teacher :P

  • shame of how dey treat us smh

  • @jbrown1169 that would be highly unethical and it wouldn't get approved. Not letting someone know the full truth before going forth with something that requires their name on a piece of paper in ink and a week or so of their lives is not so much ethical.

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