Lord Of The Flies and Bystander Apathy Effect Experiment
The fact that people will sometimes stand by and not take leadership in tense situations is a tragedy. If a person were needing help, and ten people were standing around them don’t you think they wouldn’t want help? The Bystander Apathy Effect and the events in Lord Of The Flies shows that people often follow the actions of others during dangerous or extremely stressful situations.
The Lord Of The Flies is a book where leadership, and taking a stand is important. Piggy a boy who is overweight, and is just an outcast that doesn’t fit in the situation he is in. Piggy in the Lord Of The Flies gets picked on constantly, and nobody will help except for Ralph, the leader of the group of boys on the Island that the book is set on, Ralph is the only one to that sticks up for Piggy and, he helps Piggy with difficulties that Piggy has. Jack the boy that bullies Piggy is a stuck up want to be everything. Piggy has the brains of the group of boys, he tries to use his intelligence to benefit the
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The reason this experiment was conducted because, in 1964 a woman named Kitty Genovese was walking down a street, and right as she was crossing the street to go into her home she was stabbed by an unknown attacker, while she was being stabbed many people watched but did nothing. A man yelled out his window at the attacker and he left, kitty retreated to an apartment to get help. The person that lived at the apartment opened it right as the attacker back, the attacker kept stabbing and killed her as no one did anything. So John Darley conducted an experiment where he took a person into a room, and made them take a test, as they took the test smoke started to fill the room and the person taking test got up and told someone. When Darley put three people into a room the smoke would start to fill the room but no one would do