In my book seeking knowledge is a good in and of itself, irregardless of whether it leads to progress and whether progress itself is good. It is not such good that can override any other consideration, but it is good.. — SophistiCat
I generally approve of science, although not being an expert, I cannot really gauge the quality of psychological theories and experiments qua science
the SPE’s conclusion of the value of understanding how systemic and situational forces can operate
to influence individual behavior in negative or positive directions, often without our
personal awareness. Its message is a cautionary tale of what might happen to any of us if
we are not mindful of these external pressures on our actions.
For whatever
its flaws, I continue to believe that the Stanford Prison Experiment has earned its
deserved place as a valuable contributor to psychology’s understanding of human
behavior and its complex dynamics. Multiple forces shape human behavior; they are
internal and external, genetic and dispositional, historical and contemporary, cultural and personal.
What these attacks seem to miss, is the fact that these experiments sought to better understand events that had already happened. — Tzeentch
This is what the writer, perhaps among other things, takes issue with. — Tzeentch
The Stanford prison experiment established Zimbardo as perhaps the most prominent living American psychologist. He became the primary author of one of the field’s most popular and long-running textbooks, Psychology: Core Concepts, and the host of a 1990 PBS video series, Discovering Psychology, which gained wide usage in high school and college classes and is still screened today. Both featured the Stanford prison experiment. And its popularity wasn’t limited to the United States. Polish philosopher Zygmunt Bauman’s citation of the experiment in Modernity and the Holocaust in 1989 typified a growing tradition in Eastern Europe and Germany of looking to the Stanford prison experiment for help explaining the Holocaust. In his influential 1992 book, Ordinary Men, historian Christopher Browning relied on both the Stanford prison experiment and the Milgram experiment, another social psychology touchstone, in arguing that Nazi mass killings were in part the result of situational factors (other scholars argued that subscribers to a national ideology that identified Jews as enemies of the state could hardly be described as “ordinary men”). 2001, the same year Zimbardo was elected president of the American Psychological Association, saw the release of a German-language film, Das Experiment, that was based on the SPE but amped the violence up to Nazi-worthy levels, with guards not only abusing prisoners but murdering them and each other. When prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib came to light in 2004, Zimbardo again made the rounds on the talk show circuit, arguing that the abuse had been the result not of a few “bad apple” soldiers but of a “bad barrel” and providing expert testimony on behalf of Ivan “Chip” Frederick, the staff sergeant supervising the military policemen who committed the abuses. With the resurgence of interest in the experiment, Zimbardo published The Lucifer Effect in 2007, offering more detail about it than ever before, though framed in such a way as to avoid calling his basic findings into question. The book became a national bestseller.
All the while, however, experts had been casting doubt on Zimbardo’s work. — The article in question
Ordinary people can do bad things under the right circumstances. — Tzeentch
The functional utility of Zimbardo's narrative is to present human nature as so fickle, so dependent on circumstance, that we have barely any moral agency at all ... well, at least when working for the state, to both coddle and excuse the sadist, which there seems to be good taped indication that Zimbardo has an unhealthy obsession about. — boethius
The issue is that Zimbardo, and others sympathetic to his cause, uses the experiment to make claims much stronger than:
"Ordinary people can do bad things under the right circumstances." — boethius
History provides that image of human nature. — Tzeentch
Zimbardo tried to demonstrate it through his experiment. — Tzeentch
If his experiment is based on lies, it was a bad demonstration, but it doesn't change the image history provides. — Tzeentch
My gripe is specifically with the sentiment that the theory of man's fickle morality relies on Zimbardo. — Tzeentch
This is debatable. — boethius
Which, if it's already proven by history a competent critical thinker would say "this provides strictly no new information, it was purely a superfluous demonstration of what we already know". — boethius
You seem to be arguing with no one. — boethius
Clearly a demonstration could provide further insight into the phenomenon, but I am not up to speed with Zimbardo's intentions nor am I trying to defend him. — Tzeentch
don't think that's up for debate. I think that is common knowledge. — Tzeentch
Isn't personal morality a circumstance, and the most determining circumstance at that? — Shamshir
This isn't entirely fair, since the articles that were linked question the premise I have shared. But if the wish is to debate on Zimbardo's scientific rigour or lack thereof, then that's fair enough. — Tzeentch
Just checking.I suppose I could've specified external circumstance, but I thought this was self-evident in the context of the discussion. — Tzeentch
I quite agree and find that the word moral is often used in place of the word pleasing, while rather it is more akin to beneficial. Bitter medicine for instance isn't all too pleasing, but is beneficial in that it is medicine - and as it heals and/or prevents ills, is thus moral.The reason I don't like the connotation "preference" in the context of morality is that it implies the person decides what is good and evil, which foregoes the purpose of morality, in my view. — Tzeentch
Perhaps it does and that would suggest that a person's character is often very flimsy, and associates with pleasure more often than with responsibility.In situations such as Zimbardo's experiment (under the assumption it was carried out legitimately), external pressure often prevails over a person's ideas of morality. — Tzeentch
Central in the training of guards was to exercise their power over their prisoners so that they would readily obey orders, prevent rebellion and eliminate escape attempts. My instructions to the guards were that they should maintain law and order, and also command the respect of prisoners.
In the power dynamic between them, guards should have most, while prisoners had little
or none.
I think that Zimbardo's and Milgram's experiments just hit a nerve that people wanted to hear. These experiments are so well known because they simply fit the discourse and mainstream academic views. What people just love are simple behavioural answers to complex phenomenon like systematic cruelty, war and genocide. — ssu
Yet oversimplification is a problem especially if we just want to get a simple model and then assume it can tell more that it does. One can obviously argue that the behaviour of a group is the aggregate of the actions/intensions of it's members, but that doesn't mean that from the behaviour of an individual we can say everything about the behaviour of a group. And once that group grows in size, has various instititions and so on, the complexity grows to such levels that the individual / small group experiment has little use.Experiments like Milgram's and Zimbardo's are undoubtedly over simplifications, but that is necessary in any descriptive modelling. We have to simplify complex interactions to produce models. — Isaac
Well, thanks for StreetlightX for giving that response of Zimbardo. From that I took away that the guy is a self-centered asshole.Zimbardo was brash and too much of a showman for my liking — Isaac
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