In The Milgram Experiment, Mood replicates the work of Dr. Stanley Milgram, a Yale school professor who set up a psychological experiment to see if a regular person, under the supervision of an government figure, would perform inhumane acts of cruelty on another human being. His hypothesis was that, beneath the façade of societal chivalry, there beats a savage heart in all of us. To prove this, Dr. Milgram designed an experiment involving two individuals – one deemed a "teacher" and the other the "student" – who were told that the experiment was to see if mild physical discomfort would improve behavioral results. To wit, if the student gave a wrong answer on a memory play quiz, he would be shocked. In the Yale circumstance, the student was an actor pretending to be shocked. The real experiment was to see if the teacher, if absolved of guilt, would force a button that caused the student pain.
Format: Windows Media
Duration: 1:58:49
Video: 1024×576, Windows Media Video 9, 1464kbps
Audio: 93kbps
File size: 1.4 GB
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