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Edited by dazarobbo: 7/2/2015 1:34:46 PM
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Are social experiments valid and representative, a pretext for driving social or political activism, or an exploitative scheme for fame and money?

Valid experiments on society

43

Pretext for activism

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Scheme for fame and money

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Something else

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https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=social+experiment Watch some of these, or even just read the titles, and tell me what you think. [spoiler]I think they are exploitative. For example, every video I've seen involving extremes of classes juxtaposes a supposedly good-natured homeless person with middle/upper class folk in various situations and ends up presenting the latter as apathetic or snobbish. Not only that, but I think they're inherently exploitative to the subjects of the "experiments", because it's their reactions (or non reactions) which are being used by the authors of these experiments as "evidence" to drive the underlying cause. Furthermore, when coupled with the fact that they're often posted on YouTube, they come across as simply being a pretext for entertainment value, consequently exploiting a given issue for a poster's own benefit: popularity, views, and money.[/spoiler]

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    I generally feel that those conducting the experiment have a desire for a particular outcome and often ensure that the experiment reaches that outcome. If this is the case, it's completely anti-science.

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