Migramatic Shock:
Alan Milstein on the Stanford Prison Experiments

Alan sounds off on the Jon Stewart oddity of the year:
What a Milgramatic shock to see Phillip Zimbardo on Jon Stewart the other night to promote his new book. Zimbardo, of course, was the Principal Investigator of the Stanford Prison Experiment in 1971, in which healthy volunteers were recruited to participate in a psychology experiment to explore, allegedly, how good people turn evil. (The subtitle of his new book.) He has made a career and, apparently, a nice living on a human research project regarded by most bioethicists today as patently unethical because it offered all risk and no benefit to the student subjects.

One of the main disincentives to even considering an unethical experiment, in addition to the threat of being sued by an enterprising plaintiff’s lawyer, is supposed to be the prohibition against publishing or promoting the results of such a study, even if scientifically sound. That has never stopped Zimbardo or his handlers. The Professor was even brought in to testify on behalf of one of the Abu Ghraib prison guards, opining that his experiment yielded scientific proof that human beings could not help themselves in such situations from turning cruel. The testimony, according to Zimbardo himself, was ignored by the tribunal.

What Zimbardo has never understood is that human beings simply should not be treated as a means to an end, as mere guinea pigs or, to use the terms from another horrible era, logs or material. When an experiment crosses that line, the only evil it finds is in the researcher.

Labels: ,

contribute a comment

Comments have been closed for this post.

what is this?

A 'Nature Top 50' science blog by the editors, staff and friends of The American Journal of Bioethics. Science writes: "To follow the latest twists in ... science stories with social impact, dive into this Web log"

The original story behind this blog

What people are saying about blog.bioethics.net

recently on blog.bioethics.net

Is Hope a Culprit in Cancer Clinical Trials?

A recent study conducted by Emory University School of Medicine found that therapeutic misconception is alive and well in Phase I cancer research. According to... (more)

Gingrich on IVF: Bad for Families, Bad for Bioethics

Scientists, reproductive specialists and andrologists had better prepare. If Newt Gingrich has his way (and wins the Presidency), he will have a whole new world... (more)

Canadians have Bieber Fever...For Organ Donation

Yes, it's true. Bieber Fever has spread far and wide. But it isn't just tweens who are following the pop star, Justin Bieber's, every move.... (more)

Caplan: Say No to Sterilization, Forced Abortion

Art Caplan discusses a troubling case regarding a 32-year-old pregnant woman known as "Mary Moe" who is pregnant for the third time and who suffers... (more)

Rallying Around Amelia: A Debate on Disability

The blogosphere and the airwaves are filled with indignation regarding what has happened to Amelia Rivera, a three year old who has a rare genetic... (more)

this blog's feed

  • Subscribe
    • XML
    • Google Reader or Homepage
    • Add to My Yahoo!
    • Subscribe with Bloglines
    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    • Add to My AOL
    • Convert RSS to PDF
    • Add to Technorati Favorites!
    • Add to your phone
    • Get RSS Buttons

info

archives

tags