annabenedetti
like marbles on glass
I recently saw the film The Stanford Prison Experiment.
One of the things that really intrigues me about the experiment conducted by Philip Zimbardo at Stanford University in 1971 is how it was only chance which determined who was a 'guard' and who was a 'prisoner.' The participants didn't know it, but each individual's placement into one of the two groups was determined by a coin toss.
It makes me think how fine the line is between good and evil, and how easily it can be crossed. There are a multitude of variables, of course, but to what extent does environment affect the moral choices people make every day? How culpable are people for poor decisions they make when their environment has had a significant effect in shaping their behavior, when their good intentions are overwhelmed by a bad environment over which they have little or no control?
What's shocking about the Stanford prison experiment is how quickly the psychological changes came about. The experiment was supposed to last two weeks, but it was terminated after only six days because of the sadistic behavior of the guards and the psychological deterioration of the prisoners. Only six days. The calculated degradation and dehumanization of the prisoners by the guards was extremely effective, and there was little rebellion shown by the prisoners. What rebellion was attempted was quickly contained, and it only served to unify the guards and harden their resolve while dividing the prisoners and making them more passive.
There are some controversies concerning the experiment:
To me that's one of the biggest takeaways. People in a position of power are able to abuse that power because their less dominant peers allow it, and because people in submission are often incapable of escaping that submission because of the disorienting effects of degradation, dehumanization, depersonalization, isolation, fear, helplessness, etc.
And then apply it to a dominant/submissive dynamic, whether it's a situation where you wonder how people can be so depraved, why peers don't intervene to stop abusive behavior, or why victims don't "do something" to save themselves.
The Holocaust. Civil rights abuses. Domestic abuse. Child abuse. Abu Ghraib.
The Stanford Prison Experiment
The Stanford Prison Experiment (PDF)
The Stanford prison experiment was funded by a grant from the U.S. Office of Naval Research.
One of the things that really intrigues me about the experiment conducted by Philip Zimbardo at Stanford University in 1971 is how it was only chance which determined who was a 'guard' and who was a 'prisoner.' The participants didn't know it, but each individual's placement into one of the two groups was determined by a coin toss.
It makes me think how fine the line is between good and evil, and how easily it can be crossed. There are a multitude of variables, of course, but to what extent does environment affect the moral choices people make every day? How culpable are people for poor decisions they make when their environment has had a significant effect in shaping their behavior, when their good intentions are overwhelmed by a bad environment over which they have little or no control?
What's shocking about the Stanford prison experiment is how quickly the psychological changes came about. The experiment was supposed to last two weeks, but it was terminated after only six days because of the sadistic behavior of the guards and the psychological deterioration of the prisoners. Only six days. The calculated degradation and dehumanization of the prisoners by the guards was extremely effective, and there was little rebellion shown by the prisoners. What rebellion was attempted was quickly contained, and it only served to unify the guards and harden their resolve while dividing the prisoners and making them more passive.
There are some controversies concerning the experiment:
Whether it was an actual experiment (the question to Zimbardo by a colleague, "What's the Independent Variable?")
Whether the students playing the role of guard made their own rules and weren't coached in any way (according to Zimbardo) or whether they had been given suggestions (according to Zimbardo's consultant, ex-convict Carlo Prescott).
Whether the experiment suffered from extraneous variables that would have affected validity, such as self-selection bias (did the study description attract a certain type of participant?) or demand effect (did the participants consciously or unconsciously try to meet the expectation of the experiment)?
There's a BBC documentary about the experiment, and they interview the guard known as "John Wayne," the most creatively sadistic of the guards, and he looks so, well, normal. There's something chilling about his normalcy, it's a reminder that the most ordinary among us are capable of the most inhuman behavior - or of enabling it by looking the other way. He talks about how appalling his behavior was, but even as he admits it, he laughs. He's nonchalant. He talks about how none of the guards questioned his abusiveness, and none intervened to put a stop to it.Whether the students playing the role of guard made their own rules and weren't coached in any way (according to Zimbardo) or whether they had been given suggestions (according to Zimbardo's consultant, ex-convict Carlo Prescott).
Whether the experiment suffered from extraneous variables that would have affected validity, such as self-selection bias (did the study description attract a certain type of participant?) or demand effect (did the participants consciously or unconsciously try to meet the expectation of the experiment)?
To me that's one of the biggest takeaways. People in a position of power are able to abuse that power because their less dominant peers allow it, and because people in submission are often incapable of escaping that submission because of the disorienting effects of degradation, dehumanization, depersonalization, isolation, fear, helplessness, etc.
And then apply it to a dominant/submissive dynamic, whether it's a situation where you wonder how people can be so depraved, why peers don't intervene to stop abusive behavior, or why victims don't "do something" to save themselves.
The Holocaust. Civil rights abuses. Domestic abuse. Child abuse. Abu Ghraib.
The Stanford Prison Experiment Official Trailer #1 | |
The Stanford Prison Experiment (BBC documentary) | |
The Stanford Prison Experiment
The Stanford Prison Experiment (PDF)
The Stanford prison experiment was funded by a grant from the U.S. Office of Naval Research.
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