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This bonus issue collects documentation of strange and significant laboratories in the the history of research.

Issue 00 cracker jack

SMELL RE_searchLab

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on July 15, 2015 by admin

Berlin, Germany.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Attic

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

Heathfield and London, United Kingdom.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Tuskegee

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

A memo.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Iron Lung

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

Downey, CA, United States.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Tripods

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

An installation by Nicola Twilley and Geoff Manaugh.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Milgram Re-enactment

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

Installation by Rod Dickinson with Graeme Edler and Steve Ruston.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Control Room

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

An installation by Roxy Paine.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Scatalog

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

A kit by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg & James King, with the University of Cambridge iGEM Team.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Wolong

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

Sichuan Province, China.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack

Google

Posted on July 14, 2015, updated on December 22, 2015 by admin

An online form.

Posted in Article, Issue 00 cracker jack
15+16_Stanley Milgram Diagram LABORATORY SERIES. No.15. Left: Diagram of the Stanley Milgram Experiment. Conducted at Yale University in 1961, the experiment examined the relationship between obedience and authority. The test involved two actors, one test subject and an electroshock generator: the experimenter (the figure of authority), the teacher (the test subject) and the learner (the accomplice). In this scheme, the experimenter (E) would order the teacher (T) to administer fake electric shocks to the learner (L) for every wrong answer in a series of questions, increasing the voltage each time. Two thirds of all participants (i.e. teachers) administered the highest 450 volt shock. All others continued to 300 volts. Photo: Wikipedia Right: Advertisement recruiting subjects for the Milgram Experiment on memory. “I set up a simple experiment to test how much pain an ordinary citizen would inflict on another person simply because he was ordered to by an experimental scientist. Stark authority was pitted against the subjects’ strongest moral imperatives against hurting others, and, with the subjects’ ears ringing with the screams of the victims, authority won more often than not. The extreme willingness of adults to go to almost any lengths on the command of an authority constitutes the chief finding of the study and the fact most urgently demanding explanation.” – Stanley Milgram Photo: Wikipedia.
LABORATORY SERIES. No.15. Left: Diagram of the Stanley Milgram Experiment. Conducted at Yale University in 1961, the experiment examined the relationship between obedience and authority. The test involved two actors, one test subject and an electroshock generator: the experimenter (the figure of authority), the teacher (the test subject) and the learner (the accomplice). In this scheme, the experimenter (E) would order the teacher (T) to administer fake electric shocks to the learner (L) for every wrong answer in a series of questions, increasing the voltage each time. Two thirds of all participants (i.e. teachers) administered the highest 450 volt shock. All others continued to 300 volts. Photo: Wikipedia Right: Advertisement recruiting subjects for the Milgram Experiment on memory. “I set up a simple experiment to test how much pain an ordinary citizen would inflict on another person simply because he was ordered to by an experimental scientist. Stark authority was pitted against the subjects’ strongest moral imperatives against hurting others, and, with the subjects’ ears ringing with the screams of the victims, authority won more often than not. The extreme willingness of adults to go to almost any lengths on the command of an authority constitutes the chief finding of the study and the fact most urgently demanding explanation.” – Stanley Milgram Photo: Wikipedia.

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