Stanley Milgram versus Diana Baumrind
Title: Stanley Milgram versus Diana Baumrind
Category: /Social Sciences/Psychology
Details: Words: 1031 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Stanley Milgram versus Diana Baumrind
Category: /Social Sciences/Psychology
Details: Words: 1031 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Obedience is when someone does what a person or rule tells him or her to do. People tend to follow orders of an authority, and this can sometimes result in a negative effect. An example would include all those people who were obedient to Hitler, and killed innocent people in the Holocaust. For instance, Stanley Milgram, in his article, Perils of Obedience, writes about his experiment, of how people obey an authority, neglecting their conscience,
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different views on the results the experiment portrayed. Milgram thinks his experiment was successful and that this is a threat to society, since, people are able to hurt others just because they are following orders. An event like a war could arise just because an evil authority orders people to kill. Baumrind disagreed with Milgram because she thought the experiment had many erroneous factors and that people cannot determine real life experiences with this experiment.