the true identity of some people. These people didn’t know they were being filmed, so they were driven to act naturally, which might have been a bad idea. 78 Year Old Man Gets Hit By Car and No-One Helps In this video, there are multiple people walking through the streets. There are cars driving by where a 78 year old is trying to cross. The man looks both ways and then just tries to walk across.
assigned as the learner, which is an actor, and the other is the teacher. The teacher goes into a separate room and asks the learner a serious of questions. If the learner answers wrong then a shock is given to the learner by the teacher. The doses get heavier each time and the teacher hears the screams of the learner. The results were that half of the population that the experiment was conducted on would do the cruel act of shocking the learner just because a guy in a lab coat told them to. 3. I
guilty. I wasn’t shocked that no one stopped to help these people. Because the man dressed as a homeless man no one cared to help him and as soon as he changed clothes the world was in his hands. I feel that is the problem with many people to days, they only help people who may intern do something to help them or they feel the person is important. No matter who it was laying on the ground they should’ve been helped. A man in casual
The Stanley Milgram Experiment volunteers were asked to come to a lab to investigate learning. The volunteers were introduced to a man who they thought was another volunteer, but he was really an actor. The actor always ended up as the “learner,” and the volunteer as the “Teacher.” The “Teacher” and the “Learner” were separated into different rooms. The learner was “hooked up” to a machine that the teacher thought they controlled. The teacher was to up the voltage every time the learner answered
saw anybody get hit by a car that the first thing they would do is go and make sure that they are for the most part okay and get them medical attention. Some people would just rather not worry about it though, because it’s not their problem. 3. The Bystander Effect In this video they were doing an experiment to see how people would react to different situations in public. They had somebody steal something from a woman in a very public place to see if a man would say something. The man didn’t say anything
The car hit him with such a velocity that he did a cartwheel in the air. People begin to crowd around him and slowly get closer, but no one goes to the aid of him. The man is screaming as he is in extreme pain, and traffic just keeps passing by until the police arrive on scene. Mike Kelly: indent This video shows people who do not directly go up to the man and check on him. They do though help from a distance; you can see pedestrians
15-450 volts, it goes up a volt when you get one wrong. 50% of the participants continued with the experiment the others stopped in the middle of it. I think that the way they are tricking these people into
cause pain simply because someone else told them to. The 78 year old hit on street In this video you see a man get hit by a car and no one helps him. Not even the person in the car stops or checks to make sure he is okay. Everyone just merely glimpses over at him and keeps walking. The man continues to lay there not moving but people still show no sign of concern. This video was interesting to me because not even the person who hit the man seemed at all concerned. Everyone on the street kept going
After watching The Stanley Milgram experiment, I learned that some people do horrible things just because they are under an authority. The first man in the video stops in the middle because he hears the man yelling in pain because of the shocks. Even when the scientist tells him to proceed, the man refuses and quits the experiment. There were three other people in the video that administered all 450 volts to the subjects just because the scientist was telling them there would be no harm inflicted
authority when they knew they were hurting another person. One man acted as a scientist, who the participant believed to be the authority. The scientist would tell the participant to shock the man in the other room for every question he answered incorrectly. The more he got wrong, the stronger the voltage would be. As the participants pulled the lever to shock the man, they heard series of yelling and screaming. They believed that this man was in pain, when in reality, they were hearing a recording