Stanford Prison Experiment Essay

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The Stanford Prison Study (Haney et al., 1973) is a study that suggested that humans can very likely become monsters towards their fellow humans when the chips are down (Leithead, 2011). The study also concluded that humans on the receiving end can also be easily broken in dangerous situations. The Stanford prison experiment was designed and overseen by social psychologist Phil
Zimbardo, who wanted to study the effects of imprisonment on human beings in 1971. The study rocked the world of Psychology. A group of students were divided into prisoners and guards and forced to live in a makeshift jail (Leithead, 2011). The prisoners immediately became submissive and broken, while the guards became cruel, brutal and abusive within just a day. The instinctive reactions of the …show more content…

They all seem to forget that it was an experiment and everyone could leave at any time. In less than two days, one prisoner who became hysterical for a long time had to eventually be sent home as he had become very broken. One of the prisoners even went on a hunger strike and the whole study came to an end when one of the experimenters finally objected on moral grounds. The experiment, which was to run for two weeks, just lasted for just six days. That was because everyone involved in the experiment had lost mental clarity in the process, including the Professor who allowed the experiment to go on. Though a review board determined that the study felt within the existing ethical guidelines, the guidelines were changed so that such a study was never carried out again.
The effects of the study makes the experiment one of the wackiest psychology experiments in history. However, this could have been prevented if the scientists stopped the experiment very early in the study. The institutional policy should have also been appropriate to prevent scientists from carrying out such an experiment. The fact that Prof Phil Zimbardo didn’t want to stop the experiment means

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