The Stanford Prison Experiment, conducted by psychologist Philip Zimbardo in 1971, demonstrated that ordinary college students assigned to guard roles in a simulated prison environment rapidly developed abusive and sadistic behaviors, while prisoners experienced psychological breakdown, revealing that environmental conditions and assigned roles can transform normal individuals into those who commit harmful acts.
深度探索
先修知识
- 暂无数据。
后续步骤
- 暂无数据。
深度探索
How Ordinary Students Became Evil | Stanford Prison Experiment本站添加:
August 1971, >> [music] >> Stanford University. A psychology professor named Philip Zimbardo had one disturbing question. What if evil isn't born inside us? What if the environment creates it? To find out, he recruited 24 completely normal college students, healthy, intelligent, [music] ordinary.
Then he randomly divided them into two groups, prisoners and guards. A fake prison [music] was built inside the basement of Stanford University. The experiment was supposed to last two full weeks. It barely survived six days.
[music] By day two, the guards had already started abusing their power. They screamed [music] at prisoners, forced them to do endless push-ups, humiliated them in front of everyone, and woke them up in the middle of the night for no [music] reason. No one told them to do it, but they kept escalating. Then came day three. One prisoner completely broke down mentally. He started screaming [music] uncontrollably, crying, panicking, losing touch with reality.
Researchers were forced to remove him from the experiment, >> [music] >> but things only got worse. By day five, the guards were inventing psychological [music] torture tactics on their own.
Not physical violence, something more disturbing.
>> [music] >> Mind games, isolation, fear, power. One guard, who had been a perfectly normal student just days earlier, [music] later admitted something terrifying. He said he became genuinely sadistic >> [music] >> and even started looking forward to the night shifts because that's when he could fully control the prisoners. And the scariest part? Philip Zimbardo himself became so deeply [music] absorbed in the role of prison superintendent that he stopped seeing the students as human beings until someone [music] finally snapped him back to reality. His girlfriend visited the prison on day six. She watched what was happening for less than 10 minutes and immediately [music] told him, "You have to shut this down." So he did. The Stanford Prison [music] Experiment revealed something terrifying about human nature. Under the right conditions, ordinary people can become monsters. This is Untold America.
相关推荐
Why Do We Dream? The Strange Psychology Behind It
PsychologyIsSimplified
118 views•2026-06-03
The terrifying truth about False Awakenings... #facts #glitchinthematrixstories #science
OmissionArchive
784 views•2026-05-30
🔥 Meghan’s Curtsy EXPOSED Harry’s Feelings
TheBehaviorPanel
16K views•2026-06-01
THESE ARE ALL 1 PERSON
SuperL4B
18K views•2026-06-04
Never Alone Series, Season Two | Episode One with Jesula Jeannot & Ashleigh Cromer
BeStrongGlobal
2K views•2026-05-30
When Two People With Disorganized Attachment Fall in Love: The Real Reason It Doesn't Last
AttachmentAdam
311 views•2026-06-01
Why Your Needs Keep Going Unmet In Relationships #shorts
lovestorieswithcharlenebyars
149 views•2026-05-30
Choose Your Sitting Position — What It Exposes Will Surprise You
TheSpectrumMind
217 views•2026-06-04











