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Brainwashing

Brainwashing (also known as mind control, menticide, coercive persuasion, thought control, thought reform, and forced re-education) is the concept that the human mind can be altered or controlled by certain psychological techniques. Brainwashing is said to reduce its subject's ability to think critically or independently, to allow the introduction of new, unwanted thoughts and ideas into their minds,[1] as well as to change their attitudes, values, and beliefs.[2][3]

A satirical depiction of brainwashing

The term "brainwashing" was first used in English by Edward Hunter in 1950 to describe how the Chinese government appeared to make people cooperate with them during the Korean War. Research into the concept also looked at Nazi Germany, at some criminal cases in the United States, and at the actions of human traffickers. In the late 1960s and 1970s, the CIA's MKUltra experiments failed with no operational use of the subjects. Scientific and legal debate followed, as well as media attention, about the possibility of brainwashing being a factor when Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) was used,[4] or in the conversion of people to groups which are considered to be cults.[5]

The concept of brainwashing is not now generally accepted as a scientific fact.[6][7] In casual speech, "brainwashing" and its verb form, "brainwash", are used figuratively to describe the use of propaganda to persuade or sway public opinion.[8]

China and the Korean War

The Chinese term xǐnǎo (洗腦,"wash brain")[9] was originally used to describe the coercive persuasion used under the Maoist government in China, which aimed to transform "reactionary" people into "right-thinking" members of the new Chinese social system.[10] The term punned on the Taoist custom of "cleansing / washing the heart / mind" (xǐxīn,洗心) before conducting ceremonies or entering holy places.[a]

The Oxford English Dictionary records the earliest known English-language usage of the word "brainwashing" in an article by a journalist Edward Hunter, in Miami News, published on 24 September 1950. Hunter was an outspoken anticommunist and was alleged to be a CIA agent working undercover as a journalist.[11] Hunter and others used the Chinese term to explain why, during the Korean War (1950–1953), some American prisoners of war (POWs) cooperated with their Chinese captors, and even in a few cases defected to their side.[12] British radio operator Robert W. Ford[13][14] and British army Colonel James Carne also claimed that the Chinese subjected them to brainwashing techniques during their imprisonment.[15]

The U.S. military and government laid charges of brainwashing in an effort to undermine confessions made by POWs to war crimes, including biological warfare.[16] After Chinese radio broadcasts claimed to quote Frank Schwable, Chief of Staff of the First Marine Air Wing admitting to participating in germ warfare, United Nations commander General Mark W. Clark asserted: "Whether these statements ever passed the lips of these unfortunate men is doubtful. If they did, however, too familiar are the mind-annihilating methods of these Communists in extorting whatever words they want ... The men themselves are not to blame, and they have my deepest sympathy for having been used in this abominable way."[17]

Beginning in 1953, Robert Jay Lifton interviewed American servicemen who had been POWs during the Korean War as well as priests, students, and teachers who had been held in prison in China after 1951. In addition to interviews with 25 Americans and Europeans, Lifton interviewed 15 Chinese citizens who had fled after having been subjected to indoctrination in Chinese universities. (Lifton's 1961 book Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China, was based on this research.)[18] Lifton found that when the POWs returned to the United States their thinking soon returned to normal, contrary to the popular image of "brainwashing."[19]

In 1956, after reexamining the concept of brainwashing following the Korean War, the U.S. Army published a report entitled Communist Interrogation, Indoctrination, and Exploitation of Prisoners of War, which called brainwashing a "popular misconception". The report concludes that "exhaustive research of several government agencies failed to reveal even one conclusively documented case of 'brainwashing' of an American prisoner of war in Korea."[20]

Legal cases and the "brainwashing defense"

 
Bank robbery by Patty Hearst and Symbionese Liberation Army members[21]

The concept of brainwashing has been raised in defense of criminal charges. The 1969 to 1971 case of Charles Manson, who was said to have brainwashed his followers to commit murder and other crimes, brought the issue to renewed public attention.[22][23]

In 1974, Patty Hearst, a member of the wealthy Hearst family, was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army, a left-wing militant organization. After several weeks of captivity, she agreed to join the group and took part in their activities. In 1975, she was arrested and charged with bank robbery and the use of a gun in committing a felony. Her attorney, F. Lee Bailey, argued in her trial that she should not be held responsible for her actions since her treatment by her captors was the equivalent of the alleged brainwashing of Korean War POWs (see also Diminished responsibility).[24] Bailey developed his case in conjunction with psychiatrist Louis Jolyon West and psychologist Margaret Singer. They had both studied the experiences of Korean War POWs. (In 1996 Singer published her theories in her best-selling book Cults in Our Midst.[25][26][27]) Despite this defense Hearst was found guilty.[24]

In 1990 Steven Fishman, who was a member of the Church of Scientology, was charged with mail fraud for conducting a scheme to sue large corporations via conspiring with minority stockholders in shareholder class action lawsuits. Afterward, he would sign settlements that left those stockholders empty-handed. Fishman's attorneys notified the court that they intended to rely on an insanity defense, using the theories of brainwashing and the expert witnesses of Singer and Richard Ofshe to claim that the Church of Scientology had practiced brainwashing on him which left him unsuitable to make independent decisions. The court ruled that the use of brainwashing theories is inadmissible in expert witnesses, citing the Frye standard, which states that scientific theories utilized by expert witnesses must be generally accepted in their respective fields.[28] Since then United States courts have consistently rejected testimony about mind control or brainwashing on the grounds that these theories are not part of accepted science under the Frye standard.[29]

In 2003, the brainwashing defense was used unsuccessfully in defense of Lee Boyd Malvo, who was charged with murder for his part in the D.C. sniper attacks.[30][31]

Thomas Andrew Green, in his 2014 book Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in American Legal Thought, argues that the brainwashing defense undermines the law's fundamental premise of free will.[32][33] In 2003, forensic psychologist Dick Anthony said that "no reasonable person would question that there are situations where people can be influenced against their best interests, but those arguments are evaluated based on fact, not bogus expert testimony."[31]

Allegations of brainwashing have also been raised by plaintiffs in child custody cases.[34][35]

Anti-cult movement

In the 1970s and 1980s, the anti-cult movement applied the concept of brainwashing to explain seemingly sudden and dramatic religious conversions to various new religious movements (NRMs) and other groups that they considered cults.[36][37] News media reports tended to accept their view[38] and social scientists sympathetic to the anti-cult movement, who were usually psychologists, developed revised models of mind control.[36] While some[who?] psychologists were receptive to the concept, sociologists were, for the most part, skeptical of its ability to explain conversion to NRMs.[39]

Philip Zimbardo defined mind control as "the process by which individual or collective freedom of choice and action is compromised by agents or agencies that modify or distort perception, motivation, affect, cognition or behavioral outcomes,"[40] and he suggested that any human being is susceptible to such manipulation.[41]

Benjamin Zablocki said that brainwashing is not "a process that is directly observable,"[42] is misunderstood,[43] and that the "real sociological issue" is whether "brainwashing occurs frequently enough to be considered an important social problem."[44] He said that the number of people who attest to brainwashing in interviews (performed in accordance with guidelines of the National Institute of Mental Health and National Science Foundation) is too large to result from anything other than a genuine phenomenon.[45] He said that in the two most prestigious journals dedicated to the sociology of religion there have been no articles "supporting the brainwashing perspective," while over one hundred such articles have been published in other journals "marginal to the field."[46] He concluded that the concept of brainwashing had been blacklisted.[44][46][47]

Eileen Barker criticized the concept of mind control because it functioned to justify costly interventions such as deprogramming or exit counseling.[48] She has also criticized some mental health professionals, including Singer, for accepting expert witness jobs in court cases involving NRMs.[49] Her 1984 book, The Making of a Moonie: Choice or Brainwashing?[50] describes the religious conversion process to the Unification Church (whose members are sometimes informally referred to as Moonies), which had been one of the best-known groups said to practice brainwashing.[51][52] Barker spent close to seven years studying Unification Church members and wrote that she rejects the "brainwashing" theory because it explains neither the many people who attended a recruitment meeting and did not become members nor the voluntary disaffiliation of members.[48][53][54][55][56]

James Richardson said that if the new religious movements had access to powerful brainwashing techniques, one would expect that they would have high growth rates, yet in fact, most have not had notable success in recruiting or retaining members.[57] For this and other reasons, sociologists of religion including David Bromley and Anson Shupe consider the idea that "cults" are brainwashing American youth to be "implausible."[58] Thomas Robbins, Massimo Introvigne, Lorne Dawson, Gordon Melton, Marc Galanter, and Saul Levine, amongst other scholars researching NRMs, have argued and established to the satisfaction of courts, relevant professional associations and scientific communities that there exists no generally accepted scientific theory, based upon methodologically sound research, that supports the concept of brainwashing.[59]

In 1999 forensic psychologist Dick Anthony criticized another adherent to this view, Jean-Marie Abgrall, for allegedly employing a pseudo-scientific approach and lacking any evidence that anyone's worldview was substantially changed by these coercive methods. He claimed that the concept and the fear surrounding it was used as a tool for the anti-cult movement to rationalize the persecution of minority religious groups.[60] Additionally Dick anthony in his book Misunderstanding Cults, argues that the term "brainwashing" has such sensationalist connotations that its use is detrimental to any further scientific inquiry.[61]

In 2016, Israeli anthropologist of religion and fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute Adam Klin-Oron said about then-proposed "anti-cult" legislation:

In the 1980s there was a wave of 'brainwashing' claims, and then parliaments around the world examined the issue, courts around the world examined the issue, and reached a clear ruling: That there is no such thing as cults…that the people making these claims are often not experts on the issue. And in the end courts, including in Israel, rejected expert witnesses who claimed there is "brainwashing."[62]

Scientific research

 
1977 United States Senate report on Project MKUltra, the Central Intelligence Agency's program of research into brainwashing

Research by the US government

For 20 years starting in the early 1950s, the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the United States Department of Defense conducted secret research, including Project MKUltra, in an attempt to develop practical brainwashing techniques; These experiments ranged "from electroshock to high doses of LSD".[63] The full extent of the results are unknown. The director Sidney Gottlieb and his team were apparently able to "blast away the existing mind" of a human being by using torture techniques;[63] however, reprogramming, in terms of finding "a way to insert a new mind into that resulting void",[63] was not so successful at least at the time.[64][65]

Controversial psychiatrist Colin A. Ross claim that the CIA was successful in creating programmable so-called "Manchurian Candidates" even at the time.[66] The CIA experiments using various psychedelic drugs such as LSD and Mescaline drew from previous Nazi human experimentation.[67]

In 1979, John D. Marks wrote in his book The Search for the Manchurian Candidate that until the MKULTRA program was effectively terminated in 1963, the agency's researchers had found no reliable way to brainwash another person, as all experiments at some stage always ended in either subject jamming, amnesia or catatonia, making any operational use impossible.[11]

A bipartisan Senate Armed Services Committee report, released in part in December 2008 and in full in April 2009, reported that US military trainers who came to Guantánamo Bay in December 2002 had based an interrogation class on a chart copied from a 1957 Air Force study of "Chinese Communist" brainwashing techniques. The report showed how the Secretary of Defense's 2002 authorization of the aggressive techniques at Guantánamo led to their use in Afghanistan and in Iraq, including at Abu Ghraib.[68]

American Psychological Association Task Force

In 1983, the American Psychological Association (APA) asked Singer to chair a taskforce called the APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Techniques of Persuasion and Control (DIMPAC) to investigate whether brainwashing or coercive persuasion did indeed play a role in recruitment by NRMs. The Task Force concluded that:[69]

Cults and large group awareness trainings have generated considerable controversy because of their widespread use of deceptive and indirect techniques of persuasion and control. These techniques can compromise individual freedom, and their use has resulted in serious harm to thousands of individuals and families. This report reviews the literature on this subject, proposes a new way of conceptualizing influence techniques, explores the ethical ramifications of deceptive and indirect techniques of persuasion and control, and makes recommendations addressing the problems described in the report.

On 11 May 1987, the APA's Board of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology (BSERP) rejected the DIMPAC report because the report "lacks the scientific rigor and evenhanded critical approach necessary for APA imprimatur" and concluded that "after much consideration, BSERP does not believe that we have sufficient information available to guide us in taking a position on this issue."[70]

Other areas and studies

Joost Meerloo, a Dutch psychiatrist, was an early proponent of the concept of brainwashing. "Menticide" is a neologism he coined meaning "killing of the mind". Meerloo's view was influenced by his experiences during the German occupation of his country and his work with the Dutch government and the American military in the interrogation of accused Nazi war criminals. He later emigrated to the United States and taught at Columbia University.[71] His best-selling 1956 book, The Rape of the Mind, concludes by saying:

"The modern techniques of brainwashing and menticide—those perversions of psychology—can bring almost any man into submission and surrender. Many of the victims of thought control, brainwashing, and menticide that we have talked about were strong men whose minds and wills were broken and degraded. But although the totalitarians use their knowledge of the mind for vicious and unscrupulous purposes, our democratic society can and must use its knowledge to help man to grow, to guard his freedom, and to understand himself."[72]

Russian historian Daniel Romanovsky, who interviewed survivors and eyewitnesses in the 1970s, reported on what he called "Nazi brainwashing" of the people of Belarus by the occupying Germans during the Second World War, which took place through both mass propaganda and intense re-education, especially in schools. Romanovsky noted that very soon, most people had adopted the Nazi view that the Jews were an inferior race and were closely tied to the Soviet government, views that had not been at all common before the German occupation.[73][74][75][76][77][78]

Italy has had controversy over the concept of plagio, a crime consisting in an absolute psychological—and eventually physical—domination of a person. The effect is said to be the annihilation of the subject's freedom and self-determination and the consequent negation of his or her personality. The crime of plagio has rarely been prosecuted in Italy, and only one person was ever convicted. In 1981, an Italian court found that the concept is imprecise, lacks coherence and is liable to arbitrary application.[79]

Recent scientific book publications in the field of the mental disorder "dissociative identity disorder" (DID) mention torture-based brainwashing by criminal networks and malevolent actors as a deliberate means to create multiple "programmable" personalities in a person to exploit this individual for sexual and financial reasons.[80][81][82][83][84] Earlier scientific debates in the 1980s and 1990s about torture-based ritual abuse in cults was known as "satanic ritual abuse" which was mainly viewed as a "moral panic."[85]

Kathleen Barry, co-founder of the United Nations NGO, the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW),[86][87] prompted international awareness of human sex trafficking in her 1979 book Female Sexual Slavery.[88] In his 1986 book Woman Abuse: Facts Replacing Myths, Lewis Okun reported that: "Kathleen Barry shows in Female Sexual Slavery that forced female prostitution involves coercive control practices very similar to thought reform."[89] In their 1996 book, Casting Stones: Prostitution and Liberation in Asia and the United States, Rita Nakashima Brock and Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite report that the methods commonly used by pimps to control their victims "closely resemble the brainwashing techniques of terrorists and paranoid cults."[90]

In his 2000 book, Destroying the World to Save It: Aum Shinrikyo, Apocalyptic Violence, and the New Global Terrorism, Robert Lifton applied his original ideas about thought reform to Aum Shinrikyo and the War on Terrorism, concluding that in this context thought reform was possible without violence or physical coercion. He also pointed out that in their efforts against terrorism Western governments were also using some alleged mind control techniques.[91]

In her 2004 popular science book, Brainwashing: The Science of Thought Control, neuroscientist and physiologist Kathleen Taylor reviewed the history of mind control theories, as well as notable incidents. In it she theorized that persons under the influence of brainwashing may have more rigid neurological pathways, and that can make it more difficult to rethink situations or to be able to later reorganize these pathways.[92][93][94][95][96]

In popular culture

In George Orwell's 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the main character is subjected to imprisonment, isolation, and torture in order to conform his thoughts and emotions to the wishes of the rulers of the book's fictional future totalitarian society. Orwell's vision influenced Hunter and is still reflected in the popular understanding of the concept of brainwashing.[97][98]

In the 1950s, some American films were made that featured brainwashing of POWs, including The Rack, The Bamboo Prison, Toward the Unknown, and The Fearmakers. Forbidden Area told the story of Soviet secret agents who had been brainwashed through classical conditioning by their own government so they wouldn't reveal their identities. In 1962, The Manchurian Candidate (based on the 1959 novel by Richard Condon) "put brainwashing front and center" by featuring a plot by the Soviet government to take over the United States by using a brainwashed sleeper agent for political assassination.[99][100][101] The concept of brainwashing became popularly associated with the research of Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov, which mostly involved dogs as subjects.[102] In The Manchurian Candidate, the head brainwasher is "Dr. Yen Lo, of the Pavlov Institute."[103]

The science fiction stories of Cordwainer Smith (pen name of Paul Myron Anthony Linebarger (1913–1966), a US Army officer who specialized in military intelligence and psychological warfare during the Second World War and the Korean War) depict brainwashing to remove memories of traumatic events as a normal and benign part of future medical practice.[104] In 1971, the film A Clockwork Orange positions institutional brainwashing as an option for violent convicts looking to shorten their sentences and in 1997's film Conspiracy Theory, a mentally unstable, government-brainwashed assassin seeks to prove that some very powerful people have been tampering with his mind.[105]

Mind control remains an important theme in science fiction. A subgenre is corporate mind control, in which a future society is run by one or more business corporations that dominate society, using advertising and mass media to control the population's thoughts and feelings.[106] Terry O'Brien commented: "Mind control is such a powerful image that if hypnotism did not exist, then something similar would have to have been invented: The plot device is too useful for any writer to ignore. The fear of mind control is equally as powerful an image."[107]

See also

Further reading

  • Lifton, Robert J. (1961). Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China. New York: Norton. ISBN 978-0-8078-4253-9.; Reprinted, with a new preface: University of North Carolina Press, 1989 (Online at Internet Archive).
  • Lifton, Robert J. (2000). Destroying the World to Save It: Aum Shinrikyo, Apocalyptic Violence, and the New Global Terrorism. Owl Books.
  • Meerloo, Joost (1956). "The Rape of the Mind: The Psychology of Thought Control, Menticide, and Brainwashing". World Publishing Company.
  • Singer M; et al. (1 November 1986). "Report of the APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Techniques of Persuasion and Control (DIMPAC report)". American Psychological Association. Retrieved 10 October 2008.
  • Taylor, Kathleen (2004). Brainwashing: The Science of Thought Control. Oxford University Press.
  • Zablocki, B. (1997). "The Blacklisting of a Concept. The Strange History of the Brainwashing Conjecture in the Sociology of Religion". Nova Religio. 1 (1): 96–121. doi:10.1525/nr.1997.1.1.96.
  • Zablocki, B (1998). "Exit Cost Analysis: A New Approach to the Scientific Study of Brainwashing". Nova Religio. 2 (1): 216–249. doi:10.1525/nr.1998.1.2.216.
  • Zimbardo, P. (1 November 2002). . Monitor on Psychology. Archived from the original on 4 July 2016. Retrieved 2 June 2016.

Notes

  1. ^ Note: xīn can mean "heart", "mind", or "centre" depending on context. For example, xīn zàng bìng [zh] means Cardiovascular disease, but xīn lǐ yī shēng [zh] means psychologist, and shì zhōng xīn [zh] means Central business district.

References

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External links

  • Communist Interrogation, Indoctrination, and Exploitation of Prisoners of War 1956

brainwashing, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, disambiguation, mind, control, disambiguation, education, through, labor, indoctrination, education, camp, disambiguation, this, article, contains, weasel, words, vague, phrasing, that, often, accompan. Several terms redirect here For other uses see Brainwashing disambiguation Mind control disambiguation Re education through labor indoctrination and Re education camp disambiguation This article contains weasel words vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information Such statements should be clarified or removed March 2023 Brainwashing also known as mind control menticide coercive persuasion thought control thought reform and forced re education is the concept that the human mind can be altered or controlled by certain psychological techniques Brainwashing is said to reduce its subject s ability to think critically or independently to allow the introduction of new unwanted thoughts and ideas into their minds 1 as well as to change their attitudes values and beliefs 2 3 A satirical depiction of brainwashing The term brainwashing was first used in English by Edward Hunter in 1950 to describe how the Chinese government appeared to make people cooperate with them during the Korean War Research into the concept also looked at Nazi Germany at some criminal cases in the United States and at the actions of human traffickers In the late 1960s and 1970s the CIA s MKUltra experiments failed with no operational use of the subjects Scientific and legal debate followed as well as media attention about the possibility of brainwashing being a factor when Lysergic acid diethylamide LSD was used 4 or in the conversion of people to groups which are considered to be cults 5 The concept of brainwashing is not now generally accepted as a scientific fact 6 7 In casual speech brainwashing and its verb form brainwash are used figuratively to describe the use of propaganda to persuade or sway public opinion 8 Contents 1 China and the Korean War 2 Legal cases and the brainwashing defense 3 Anti cult movement 4 Scientific research 4 1 Research by the US government 4 2 American Psychological Association Task Force 5 Other areas and studies 6 In popular culture 7 See also 8 Further reading 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksChina and the Korean War EditSee also Thought reform in China The Chinese term xǐnǎo 洗腦 wash brain 9 was originally used to describe the coercive persuasion used under the Maoist government in China which aimed to transform reactionary people into right thinking members of the new Chinese social system 10 The term punned on the Taoist custom of cleansing washing the heart mind xǐxin 洗心 before conducting ceremonies or entering holy places a The Oxford English Dictionary records the earliest known English language usage of the word brainwashing in an article by a journalist Edward Hunter in Miami News published on 24 September 1950 Hunter was an outspoken anticommunist and was alleged to be a CIA agent working undercover as a journalist 11 Hunter and others used the Chinese term to explain why during the Korean War 1950 1953 some American prisoners of war POWs cooperated with their Chinese captors and even in a few cases defected to their side 12 British radio operator Robert W Ford 13 14 and British army Colonel James Carne also claimed that the Chinese subjected them to brainwashing techniques during their imprisonment 15 The U S military and government laid charges of brainwashing in an effort to undermine confessions made by POWs to war crimes including biological warfare 16 After Chinese radio broadcasts claimed to quote Frank Schwable Chief of Staff of the First Marine Air Wing admitting to participating in germ warfare United Nations commander General Mark W Clark asserted Whether these statements ever passed the lips of these unfortunate men is doubtful If they did however too familiar are the mind annihilating methods of these Communists in extorting whatever words they want The men themselves are not to blame and they have my deepest sympathy for having been used in this abominable way 17 Beginning in 1953 Robert Jay Lifton interviewed American servicemen who had been POWs during the Korean War as well as priests students and teachers who had been held in prison in China after 1951 In addition to interviews with 25 Americans and Europeans Lifton interviewed 15 Chinese citizens who had fled after having been subjected to indoctrination in Chinese universities Lifton s 1961 book Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism A Study of Brainwashing in China was based on this research 18 Lifton found that when the POWs returned to the United States their thinking soon returned to normal contrary to the popular image of brainwashing 19 In 1956 after reexamining the concept of brainwashing following the Korean War the U S Army published a report entitled Communist Interrogation Indoctrination and Exploitation of Prisoners of War which called brainwashing a popular misconception The report concludes that exhaustive research of several government agencies failed to reveal even one conclusively documented case of brainwashing of an American prisoner of war in Korea 20 Legal cases and the brainwashing defense Edit Bank robbery by Patty Hearst and Symbionese Liberation Army members 21 The concept of brainwashing has been raised in defense of criminal charges The 1969 to 1971 case of Charles Manson who was said to have brainwashed his followers to commit murder and other crimes brought the issue to renewed public attention 22 23 In 1974 Patty Hearst a member of the wealthy Hearst family was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army a left wing militant organization After several weeks of captivity she agreed to join the group and took part in their activities In 1975 she was arrested and charged with bank robbery and the use of a gun in committing a felony Her attorney F Lee Bailey argued in her trial that she should not be held responsible for her actions since her treatment by her captors was the equivalent of the alleged brainwashing of Korean War POWs see also Diminished responsibility 24 Bailey developed his case in conjunction with psychiatrist Louis Jolyon West and psychologist Margaret Singer They had both studied the experiences of Korean War POWs In 1996 Singer published her theories in her best selling book Cults in Our Midst 25 26 27 Despite this defense Hearst was found guilty 24 In 1990 Steven Fishman who was a member of the Church of Scientology was charged with mail fraud for conducting a scheme to sue large corporations via conspiring with minority stockholders in shareholder class action lawsuits Afterward he would sign settlements that left those stockholders empty handed Fishman s attorneys notified the court that they intended to rely on an insanity defense using the theories of brainwashing and the expert witnesses of Singer and Richard Ofshe to claim that the Church of Scientology had practiced brainwashing on him which left him unsuitable to make independent decisions The court ruled that the use of brainwashing theories is inadmissible in expert witnesses citing the Frye standard which states that scientific theories utilized by expert witnesses must be generally accepted in their respective fields 28 Since then United States courts have consistently rejected testimony about mind control or brainwashing on the grounds that these theories are not part of accepted science under the Frye standard 29 In 2003 the brainwashing defense was used unsuccessfully in defense of Lee Boyd Malvo who was charged with murder for his part in the D C sniper attacks 30 31 Thomas Andrew Green in his 2014 book Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in American Legal Thought argues that the brainwashing defense undermines the law s fundamental premise of free will 32 33 In 2003 forensic psychologist Dick Anthony said that no reasonable person would question that there are situations where people can be influenced against their best interests but those arguments are evaluated based on fact not bogus expert testimony 31 Allegations of brainwashing have also been raised by plaintiffs in child custody cases 34 35 Anti cult movement EditMain article Anti cult movement Phillip Zimbardo In the 1970s and 1980s the anti cult movement applied the concept of brainwashing to explain seemingly sudden and dramatic religious conversions to various new religious movements NRMs and other groups that they considered cults 36 37 News media reports tended to accept their view 38 and social scientists sympathetic to the anti cult movement who were usually psychologists developed revised models of mind control 36 While some who psychologists were receptive to the concept sociologists were for the most part skeptical of its ability to explain conversion to NRMs 39 Philip Zimbardo defined mind control as the process by which individual or collective freedom of choice and action is compromised by agents or agencies that modify or distort perception motivation affect cognition or behavioral outcomes 40 and he suggested that any human being is susceptible to such manipulation 41 Benjamin Zablocki said that brainwashing is not a process that is directly observable 42 is misunderstood 43 and that the real sociological issue is whether brainwashing occurs frequently enough to be considered an important social problem 44 He said that the number of people who attest to brainwashing in interviews performed in accordance with guidelines of the National Institute of Mental Health and National Science Foundation is too large to result from anything other than a genuine phenomenon 45 He said that in the two most prestigious journals dedicated to the sociology of religion there have been no articles supporting the brainwashing perspective while over one hundred such articles have been published in other journals marginal to the field 46 He concluded that the concept of brainwashing had been blacklisted 44 46 47 Eileen Barker criticized the concept of mind control because it functioned to justify costly interventions such as deprogramming or exit counseling 48 She has also criticized some mental health professionals including Singer for accepting expert witness jobs in court cases involving NRMs 49 Her 1984 book The Making of a Moonie Choice or Brainwashing 50 describes the religious conversion process to the Unification Church whose members are sometimes informally referred to as Moonies which had been one of the best known groups said to practice brainwashing 51 52 Barker spent close to seven years studying Unification Church members and wrote that she rejects the brainwashing theory because it explains neither the many people who attended a recruitment meeting and did not become members nor the voluntary disaffiliation of members 48 53 54 55 56 James Richardson said that if the new religious movements had access to powerful brainwashing techniques one would expect that they would have high growth rates yet in fact most have not had notable success in recruiting or retaining members 57 For this and other reasons sociologists of religion including David Bromley and Anson Shupe consider the idea that cults are brainwashing American youth to be implausible 58 Thomas Robbins Massimo Introvigne Lorne Dawson Gordon Melton Marc Galanter and Saul Levine amongst other scholars researching NRMs have argued and established to the satisfaction of courts relevant professional associations and scientific communities that there exists no generally accepted scientific theory based upon methodologically sound research that supports the concept of brainwashing 59 In 1999 forensic psychologist Dick Anthony criticized another adherent to this view Jean Marie Abgrall for allegedly employing a pseudo scientific approach and lacking any evidence that anyone s worldview was substantially changed by these coercive methods He claimed that the concept and the fear surrounding it was used as a tool for the anti cult movement to rationalize the persecution of minority religious groups 60 Additionally Dick anthony in his book Misunderstanding Cults argues that the term brainwashing has such sensationalist connotations that its use is detrimental to any further scientific inquiry 61 In 2016 Israeli anthropologist of religion and fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute Adam Klin Oron said about then proposed anti cult legislation In the 1980s there was a wave of brainwashing claims and then parliaments around the world examined the issue courts around the world examined the issue and reached a clear ruling That there is no such thing as cults that the people making these claims are often not experts on the issue And in the end courts including in Israel rejected expert witnesses who claimed there is brainwashing 62 Scientific research Edit 1977 United States Senate report on Project MKUltra the Central Intelligence Agency s program of research into brainwashing Research by the US government Edit Main article Project MKUltra For 20 years starting in the early 1950s the United States Central Intelligence Agency CIA and the United States Department of Defense conducted secret research including Project MKUltra in an attempt to develop practical brainwashing techniques These experiments ranged from electroshock to high doses of LSD 63 The full extent of the results are unknown The director Sidney Gottlieb and his team were apparently able to blast away the existing mind of a human being by using torture techniques 63 however reprogramming in terms of finding a way to insert a new mind into that resulting void 63 was not so successful at least at the time 64 65 Controversial psychiatrist Colin A Ross claim that the CIA was successful in creating programmable so called Manchurian Candidates even at the time 66 The CIA experiments using various psychedelic drugs such as LSD and Mescaline drew from previous Nazi human experimentation 67 In 1979 John D Marks wrote in his book The Search for the Manchurian Candidate that until the MKULTRA program was effectively terminated in 1963 the agency s researchers had found no reliable way to brainwash another person as all experiments at some stage always ended in either subject jamming amnesia or catatonia making any operational use impossible 11 A bipartisan Senate Armed Services Committee report released in part in December 2008 and in full in April 2009 reported that US military trainers who came to Guantanamo Bay in December 2002 had based an interrogation class on a chart copied from a 1957 Air Force study of Chinese Communist brainwashing techniques The report showed how the Secretary of Defense s 2002 authorization of the aggressive techniques at Guantanamo led to their use in Afghanistan and in Iraq including at Abu Ghraib 68 American Psychological Association Task Force Edit Main article APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Methods of Persuasion and ControlIn 1983 the American Psychological Association APA asked Singer to chair a taskforce called the APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Techniques of Persuasion and Control DIMPAC to investigate whether brainwashing or coercive persuasion did indeed play a role in recruitment by NRMs The Task Force concluded that 69 Cults and large group awareness trainings have generated considerable controversy because of their widespread use of deceptive and indirect techniques of persuasion and control These techniques can compromise individual freedom and their use has resulted in serious harm to thousands of individuals and families This report reviews the literature on this subject proposes a new way of conceptualizing influence techniques explores the ethical ramifications of deceptive and indirect techniques of persuasion and control and makes recommendations addressing the problems described in the report On 11 May 1987 the APA s Board of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology BSERP rejected the DIMPAC report because the report lacks the scientific rigor and evenhanded critical approach necessary for APA imprimatur and concluded that after much consideration BSERP does not believe that we have sufficient information available to guide us in taking a position on this issue 70 Other areas and studies Edit Joost Meerloo Joost Meerloo a Dutch psychiatrist was an early proponent of the concept of brainwashing Menticide is a neologism he coined meaning killing of the mind Meerloo s view was influenced by his experiences during the German occupation of his country and his work with the Dutch government and the American military in the interrogation of accused Nazi war criminals He later emigrated to the United States and taught at Columbia University 71 His best selling 1956 book The Rape of the Mind concludes by saying The modern techniques of brainwashing and menticide those perversions of psychology can bring almost any man into submission and surrender Many of the victims of thought control brainwashing and menticide that we have talked about were strong men whose minds and wills were broken and degraded But although the totalitarians use their knowledge of the mind for vicious and unscrupulous purposes our democratic society can and must use its knowledge to help man to grow to guard his freedom and to understand himself 72 Russian historian Daniel Romanovsky who interviewed survivors and eyewitnesses in the 1970s reported on what he called Nazi brainwashing of the people of Belarus by the occupying Germans during the Second World War which took place through both mass propaganda and intense re education especially in schools Romanovsky noted that very soon most people had adopted the Nazi view that the Jews were an inferior race and were closely tied to the Soviet government views that had not been at all common before the German occupation 73 74 75 76 77 78 Italy has had controversy over the concept of plagio a crime consisting in an absolute psychological and eventually physical domination of a person The effect is said to be the annihilation of the subject s freedom and self determination and the consequent negation of his or her personality The crime of plagio has rarely been prosecuted in Italy and only one person was ever convicted In 1981 an Italian court found that the concept is imprecise lacks coherence and is liable to arbitrary application 79 Recent scientific book publications in the field of the mental disorder dissociative identity disorder DID mention torture based brainwashing by criminal networks and malevolent actors as a deliberate means to create multiple programmable personalities in a person to exploit this individual for sexual and financial reasons 80 81 82 83 84 Earlier scientific debates in the 1980s and 1990s about torture based ritual abuse in cults was known as satanic ritual abuse which was mainly viewed as a moral panic 85 Kathleen Barry co founder of the United Nations NGO the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women CATW 86 87 prompted international awareness of human sex trafficking in her 1979 book Female Sexual Slavery 88 In his 1986 book Woman Abuse Facts Replacing Myths Lewis Okun reported that Kathleen Barry shows in Female Sexual Slavery that forced female prostitution involves coercive control practices very similar to thought reform 89 In their 1996 book Casting Stones Prostitution and Liberation in Asia and the United States Rita Nakashima Brock and Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite report that the methods commonly used by pimps to control their victims closely resemble the brainwashing techniques of terrorists and paranoid cults 90 In his 2000 book Destroying the World to Save It Aum Shinrikyo Apocalyptic Violence and the New Global Terrorism Robert Lifton applied his original ideas about thought reform to Aum Shinrikyo and the War on Terrorism concluding that in this context thought reform was possible without violence or physical coercion He also pointed out that in their efforts against terrorism Western governments were also using some alleged mind control techniques 91 In her 2004 popular science book Brainwashing The Science of Thought Control neuroscientist and physiologist Kathleen Taylor reviewed the history of mind control theories as well as notable incidents In it she theorized that persons under the influence of brainwashing may have more rigid neurological pathways and that can make it more difficult to rethink situations or to be able to later reorganize these pathways 92 93 94 95 96 In popular culture EditMain article Mind control in popular culture Laurence Harvey and Frank Sinatra in The Manchurian Candidate In George Orwell s 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty Four the main character is subjected to imprisonment isolation and torture in order to conform his thoughts and emotions to the wishes of the rulers of the book s fictional future totalitarian society Orwell s vision influenced Hunter and is still reflected in the popular understanding of the concept of brainwashing 97 98 In the 1950s some American films were made that featured brainwashing of POWs including The Rack The Bamboo Prison Toward the Unknown and The Fearmakers Forbidden Area told the story of Soviet secret agents who had been brainwashed through classical conditioning by their own government so they wouldn t reveal their identities In 1962 The Manchurian Candidate based on the 1959 novel by Richard Condon put brainwashing front and center by featuring a plot by the Soviet government to take over the United States by using a brainwashed sleeper agent for political assassination 99 100 101 The concept of brainwashing became popularly associated with the research of Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov which mostly involved dogs as subjects 102 In The Manchurian Candidate the head brainwasher is Dr Yen Lo of the Pavlov Institute 103 The science fiction stories of Cordwainer Smith pen name of Paul Myron Anthony Linebarger 1913 1966 a US Army officer who specialized in military intelligence and psychological warfare during the Second World War and the Korean War depict brainwashing to remove memories of traumatic events as a normal and benign part of future medical practice 104 In 1971 the film A Clockwork Orange positions institutional brainwashing as an option for violent convicts looking to shorten their sentences and in 1997 s film Conspiracy Theory a mentally unstable government brainwashed assassin seeks to prove that some very powerful people have been tampering with his mind 105 Mind control remains an important theme in science fiction A subgenre is corporate mind control in which a future society is run by one or more business corporations that dominate society using advertising and mass media to control the population s thoughts and feelings 106 Terry O Brien commented Mind control is such a powerful image that if hypnotism did not exist then something similar would have to have been invented The plot device is too useful for any writer to ignore The fear of mind control is equally as powerful an image 107 See also EditBehavior modification Indoctrination Manipulation psychology Abusive power and control Psychological warfare Undue influence Hypnosis Political abuse of psychiatry Reality distortion field Unethical human experimentation in the United States Thought Reform and the Psychology of TotalismFurther reading EditLifton Robert J 1961 Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism A Study of Brainwashing in China New York Norton ISBN 978 0 8078 4253 9 Reprinted with a new preface University of North Carolina Press 1989 Online at Internet Archive Lifton Robert J 2000 Destroying the World to Save It Aum Shinrikyo Apocalyptic Violence and the New Global Terrorism Owl Books Meerloo Joost 1956 The Rape of the Mind The Psychology of Thought Control Menticide and Brainwashing World Publishing Company Singer M et al 1 November 1986 Report of the APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Techniques of Persuasion and Control DIMPAC report American Psychological Association Retrieved 10 October 2008 Taylor Kathleen 2004 Brainwashing The Science of Thought Control Oxford University Press Zablocki B 1997 The Blacklisting of a Concept The Strange History of the Brainwashing Conjecture in the Sociology of Religion Nova Religio 1 1 96 121 doi 10 1525 nr 1997 1 1 96 Zablocki B 1998 Exit Cost Analysis A New Approach to the Scientific Study of Brainwashing Nova Religio 2 1 216 249 doi 10 1525 nr 1998 1 2 216 Zimbardo P 1 November 2002 Mind Control Psychological Reality or Mindless Rhetoric Monitor on Psychology Archived from the original on 4 July 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2016 Notes Edit Note xin can mean heart mind or centre depending on context For example xin zang bing zh means Cardiovascular disease but xin lǐ yi sheng zh means psychologist and shi zhōng xin zh means Central business district References Edit Campbell Robert Jean 2004 Campbell s Psychiatric Dictionary USA Oxford University Press p 403 Corsini Raymond J 2002 The Dictionary of Psychology Psychology Press p 127 Kowal D M 2000 Brainwashing In Love A E ed Encyclopedia of Psychology Vol 1 American Psychological Association pp 463 464 doi 10 1037 10516 173 Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Religion Vol 2 Gyan Publishing House 2005 Wright Stuart December 1997 Media coverage of unconventional religion Any good news for minority faiths Review of Religious Research 39 2 101 115 doi 10 2307 3512176 JSTOR 3512176 Usarski Frank 6 December 2012 Cresswell Jamie Wilson Bryan eds New Religious Movements Challenge and Response Routledge p 238 ISBN 9781134636969 there have been until now a lack of any convincing scientific evidence which can be applied in a generalized form to show that involvement in a New Religious Movement have any destructive consequences for the psyche of the individual concerned The fact that in all the ensuing years no one has succeeded in verifying beyond a reasonable doubt any of these claims has however never been regarded as a reason to exonerate the groups in any way Thus up to the time of writing there has not been one single successful legal conviction of the Scientology Church even though this group has come to be regarded as the most dangerous of the new religious organizations The fact that even long term investigations have as yet failed to produce the desired results continues to be ignored American Psychiatric Association DSM 5 Brainwash Definition amp Meaning Merriam Webster Dictionary Word dictionary 洗腦 MDBG English to Chinese dictionary mdbg net Taylor Kathleen 2006 Brainwashing The Science of Thought Control Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 5 ISBN 978 0199204786 Retrieved 2 July 2010 a b Marks John 1979 Chapter 8 Brainwashing The Search for the Manchurian Candidate The CIA and mind control New York Times Books ISBN 978 0812907735 Retrieved 30 December 2008 In September 1950 the Miami News published an article by Edward Hunter titled Brain Washing Tactics Force Chinese into Ranks of Communist Party It was the first printed use in any language of the term brainwashing Hunter a CIA propaganda operator who worked undercover as a journalist turned out a steady stream of books and articles on the subject Browning Michael 14 March 2003 Was kidnapped Utah teen brainwashed Palm Beach Post Palm Beach ISSN 1528 5758 During the Korean War captured American soldiers were subjected to prolonged interrogations and harangues by their captors who often worked in relays and used the good cop bad cop approach alternating a brutal interrogator with a gentle one It was all part of Xi Nao washing the brain The Chinese and Koreans were making valiant attempts to convert the captives to the communist way of thought Ford R C 1990 Captured in Tibet Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195815702 Ford R C 1997 Wind between the Worlds Captured in Tibet SLG Books ISBN 978 0961706692 Red germ charges cite 2 U S Marines PDF The New York Times 23 February 1954 Retrieved 16 February 2012 Endicott Stephen Hagerman Edward 1998 The United States and Biological Warfare Secrets from the early Cold War Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253334725 Clark denounces germ war charges PDF The New York Times 24 February 1953 Retrieved 16 February 2012 Wilkes A L 1998 Knowledge in Minds Psychology Press p 323 ISBN 978 0863774393 Lifton Robert J April 1954 Home by Ship Reaction patterns of American prisoners of war repatriated from North Korea American Journal of Psychiatry 110 10 732 739 doi 10 1176 ajp 110 10 732 PMID 13138750 U S Department of the Army 15 May 1956 Communist Interrogation Indoctrination and Exploitation of Prisoners of War PDF Washington DC U S Government Printing Office pp 17 51 Pamphlet number 30 101 Lucas Dean 14 May 2013 Patty Hearst Famous Pictures Magazine Retrieved 21 January 2016 Minds on Trial Great Cases in Law and Psychology by Charles Patrick Ewing Joseph T McCann pp 34 36 Shifting the Blame How Victimization Became a Criminal Defense Saundra Davis Westervelt Rutgers University Press 1998 p 158 a b Regulating Religion Case Studies from Around the Globe James T Richardson Springer Science amp Business Media 2012 p 518 ISBN missing Cults in Our Midst The Continuing Fight Against Their Hidden Menace Archived 2 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Margaret Thaler Singer Jossey Bass publisher 2003 ISBN 0787967416 Clarke Peter Clarke Reader in Modern History Fellow Peter 2004 Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements ISBN 978 1134499700 Hilts Philip J 9 January 1999 Louis J West 74 Psychiatrist Who Studied Extremes Dies The New York Times Retrieved 31 December 2016 United States v Fishman 1990 Justia Law Anthony Dick Robbins Thomas 1992 Law social science and the brainwashing exception to the first amendment Behavioral Sciences amp the Law 10 1 5 29 doi 10 1002 bsl 2370100103 Retrieved 13 March 2023 Mental Condition Defences and the Criminal Justice System Perspectives from Law and Medicine Ben Livings Alan Reed Nicola Wake Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2015 p 98 ISBN missing a b Oldenburg Don 2003 11 21 Stressed to Kill The Defense of Brainwashing Sniper Suspect s Claim Triggers More Debate Archived 1 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post reproduced in Defence Brief issue 269 published by Steven Skurka amp Associates Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in American Legal Thought Thomas Andrew Green Cambridge University Press 2014 p 391 ISBN missing LaFave s Criminal Law 5th Hornbook Series Wayne LaFave West Academic 18 March 2010 pp 208 210 ISBN missing Warshak R A 2010 Divorce Poison How to Protect Your Family from Bad mouthing and Brainwashing New York Harper Collins Richardson James T Regulating Religion Case Studies from Around the Globe Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers 2004 p 16 ISBN 978 0306478871 a b Bromley David G 1998 Brainwashing In William H Swatos Jr ed Encyclopedia of Religion and Society Walnut Creek CA AltaMira pp 61 62 ISBN 978 0 7619 8956 1 Barker Eileen New Religious Movements A Practical Introduction London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1989 Wright Stewart A 1997 Media Coverage of Unconventional Religion Any Good News for Minority Faiths Review of Religious Research 39 2 101 115 doi 10 2307 3512176 JSTOR 3512176 Barker Eileen 1986 Religious Movements Cult and Anti Cult Since Jonestown Annual Review of Sociology 12 329 346 doi 10 1146 annurev so 12 080186 001553 Zimbardo Philip G November 2002 Mind Control Psychological Reality or Mindless Rhetoric Monitor on Psychology Archived from the original on 4 July 2016 Retrieved 2 June 2016 Mind control is the process by which individual or collective freedom of choice and action is compromised by agents or agencies that modify or distort perception motivation affect cognition or behavioral outcomes It is neither magical nor mystical but a process that involves a set of basic social psychological principles Conformity compliance persuasion dissonance reactance guilt and fear arousal modeling and identification are some of the staple social influence ingredients well studied in psychological experiments and field studies In some combinations they create a powerful crucible of extreme mental and behavioral manipulation when synthesized with several other real world factors such as charismatic authoritarian leaders dominant ideologies social isolation physical debilitation induced phobias and extreme threats or promised rewards that are typically deceptively orchestrated over an extended time period in settings where they are applied intensively A body of social science evidence shows that when systematically practiced by state sanctioned police military or destructive cults mind control can induce false confessions create converts who willingly torture or kill invented enemies and engage indoctrinated members to work tirelessly give up their money and even their lives for the cause Zimbardo P 1997 What messages are behind today s cults Monitor on Psychology 14 Archived from the original on 2 May 1998 Retrieved 1 October 2009 Allen Charlotte December 1998 Brainwashed Scholars of Cults Accuse Each Other of Bad Faith Lingua Franca linguafranca com Archived from the original on 3 December 2000 Retrieved 16 June 2014 Zablocki Benjamin 2001 Misunderstanding Cults Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field U of Toronto Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 8020 8188 9 a b Zablocki Benjamin October 1997 The Blacklisting of a Concept The Strange History of the Brainwashing Conjecture in the Sociology of Religion Nova Religio 1 1 96 121 doi 10 1525 nr 1997 1 1 96 Zablocki Benjamin 2001 Misunderstanding Cults Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field U of Toronto Press pp 194 201 ISBN 978 0 8020 8188 9 a b Zablocki Benjamin April 1998 TReply to Bromley Nova Religio 1 2 267 271 doi 10 1525 nr 1998 1 2 267 Phil Zuckerman Invitation to the Sociology of Religion Psychology Press 24 July 2003 p 28 ISBN missing a b Review William Rusher National Review 19 December 1986 Barker Eileen 1995 The Scientific Study of Religion You Must Be Joking Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 34 3 287 310 doi 10 2307 1386880 JSTOR 1386880 Eileen Barker The Making of a Moonie Choice or Brainwashing Blackwell Publishers Oxford United Kingdom ISBN 0 631 13246 5 Moon s death marks end of an era Eileen Barker CNN 3 September 2012 Although Moon is likely to be remembered for all these things mass weddings accusations of brainwashing political intrigue and enormous wealth he should also be remembered as creating what was arguably one of the most comprehensive and innovative theologies embraced by a new religion of the period Hyung Jin Kim 2 September 2012 Unification Church founder Rev Sun Myung Moon dies at 92 USA Today ISSN 0734 7456 Archived from the original on 29 September 2012 Retrieved 2 September 2012 The Rev Sun Myung Moon was a self proclaimed messiah who built a global business empire He called both North Korean leaders and American presidents his friends but spent time in prisons in both countries His followers around the world cherished him while his detractors accused him of brainwashing recruits and extracting money from worshippers New Religious Movements Some Problems of Definition George Chryssides Diskus 1997 The Market for Martyrs Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Laurence Iannaccone George Mason University 2006 One of the most comprehensive and influential studies was The Making of a Moonie Choice or Brainwashing by Eileen Barker 1984 Barker could find no evidence that Moonie recruits were ever kidnapped confined or coerced Participants at Moonie retreats were not deprived of sleep the lectures were not trance inducing and there was not much chanting no drugs or alcohol and little that could be termed a frenzy or ecstatic experience People were free to leave and leave they did Barker s extensive enumerations showed that among the recruits who went so far as to attend two day retreats claimed to beMoonie s most effective means of brainwashing fewer than 25 joined the group for more than a week and only 5 remained full time members one year later And of course most contacts dropped out before attending a retreat Of all those who visited a Moonie center at least once not one in two hundred remained in the movement two years later With failure rates exceeding 99 5 it comes as no surprise that full time Moonie membership in the U S never exceeded a few thousand And this was one of the most successful New Religious Movements of the era Oakes Len By far the best study of the conversion process is Eileen Barker s The Making of a Moonie from Prophetic Charisma The Psychology of Revolutionary Religious Personalities 1997 ISBN 0 8156 0398 3 Storr Anthony 1996 Feet of clay a study of gurus ISBN 0 684 83495 2 Richardson James T June 1985 The active vs passive convert paradigm conflict in conversion recruitment research Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 24 2 163 179 doi 10 2307 1386340 JSTOR 1386340 Brainwashing by Religious Cults religioustolerance org Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 23 November 2004 Richardson James T 2009 Religion and The Law in The Oxford Handbook of the Sociology of Religion Peter Clarke ed Oxford Handbooks Online p 426 Anthony Dick 1999 Pseudoscience and Minority Religions An Evaluation of the Brainwashing Theories of Jean Marie Abgrall Social Justice Research 12 4 421 456 doi 10 1023 A 1022081411463 S2CID 140454555 Robbins Thomas Zablocki Benjamin David 2001 Misunderstanding Cults Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8188 9 1 Times of Israel a b c The CIA s Secret Quest for Mind Control Torture LSD and A Poisoner in Chief NPR org Anthony Dick 1999 Pseudoscience and Minority Religions An evaluation of the brainwashing theories of Jean Marie Social Justice Research 12 4 421 456 doi 10 1023 A 1022081411463 S2CID 140454555 Chapter 3 part 4 Supreme Court Dissents Invoke the Nuremberg Code CIA and DOD Human Subjects Research Scandals Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments Final Report Archived from the original on 9 November 2004 Retrieved 24 August 2005 MKUltra began in 1950 and was motivated largely in response to alleged Soviet Chinese and North Korean uses of mind control techniques on U S prisoners of war in Korea Book Review Journal of Trauma amp Dissociation 2 3 123 128 2001 doi 10 1300 J229v02n03 08 S2CID 220439052 The Search for the Manchurian Candidate The CIA and Mind Control By John Marks P 93 c 1979 by John Marks Published by Times Books ISBN 0 8129 0773 6 Chaddock Gail Russell 22 April 2009 Report says top officials set tone for detainee abuse The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 3 January 2020 Singer Margaret Goldstein Harold Langone Michael Miller Jesse S Temerlin Maurice K West Louis J November 1986 Report of the APA Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Techniques of Persuasion and Control Report via Baylor University American Psychological Association Board of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology BSERP 11 May 1987 APA Memorandum to Members of the Task Force on DIMPAC Cult Education Retrieved 18 November 2008 BSERP thanks the Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Methods of Persuasion and Control for its service but is unable to accept the report of the Task Force In general the report lacks the scientific rigor and evenhanded critical approach necessary for APA imprimatur The Oxford Handbook of Propaganda Studies Jonathan Auerbach Russ Castronovo Oxford University Press 2014 p 114 ISBN missing Meerloo Joost 1956 The Rape of the Mind The Psychology of Thought Control Menticide and Brainwashing World Publishing Company Nazi Europe and the Final Solution David Bankier Israel Gutman Berghahn Books 2009 pp 282 285 Gray Zones Ambiguity and Compromise in the Holocaust and its Aftermath Jonathan Petropoulos John Roth Berghahn Books 2005 p 209 ISBN missing The Minsk Ghetto 1941 1943 Jewish Resistance and Soviet Internationalism Barbara Epstein University of California Press 2008 p 295 ISBN missing Bringing the Dark Past to Light The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe John Paul Himka Joanna Beata Michlic University of Nebraska Press 2013 pp 74 78 ISBN missing Interview Angelfire com Retrieved 5 August 2019 Romanovsky Daniel 2009 The Soviet Person as a Bystander of the Holocaust The case of eastern Belorussia in Bankier David Gutman Israel eds Nazi Europe and the Final Solution Berghahn Books p 276 ISBN 978 1845454104 Romanovsky D 1999 The Holocaust in the Eyes of Homo Sovieticus A Survey Based on Northeastern Belorussia and Northwestern Russia Holocaust and Genocide Studies 13 3 355 382 doi 10 1093 hgs 13 3 355 Romanovsky Daniel 1997 Soviet Jews Under Nazi Occupation in Northeastern Belarus and Western Russia in Gitelman Zvi ed Bitter Legacy Confronting the Holocaust in the USSR Indiana University Press p 241 Alessandro Usai Profili penali dei condizionamenti mentali Milano 1996 ISBN 88 14 06071 1 page needed Schwartz Rachel Wingfield 22 March 2018 An evil cradling Cult practices and the manipulation of attachment needs in ritual abuse Ritual Abuse and Mind Control Routledge pp 39 55 doi 10 4324 9780429479700 2 ISBN 978 0 429 47970 0 retrieved 11 July 2021 Miller Alison 11 May 2018 Becoming Yourself Routledge pp 347 370 doi 10 4324 9780429472251 21 ISBN 978 0 429 47225 1 retrieved 11 July 2021 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a Missing or empty title help Miller Alison 8 May 2018 Healing the Unimaginable doi 10 4324 9780429475467 ISBN 978 0429475467 Alayarian A 2018 Trauma Torture and Dissociation A Psychoanalytic View n p Taylor amp Francis ISBN missing Schwartz H L 2013 The Alchemy of Wolves and Sheep A Relational Approach to Internalized Perpetration in Complex Trauma Survivors US Taylor amp Francis ISBN missing Goode Erich Ben Yehuda Nachman 1994 Moral Panics Culture Politics and Social Construction Annual Review of Sociology 20 149 171 doi 10 1146 annurev so 20 080194 001053 ISSN 0360 0572 JSTOR 2083363 A Distinctive Style Article Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2018 On the Issues Article Ontheissuesmagazine com Retrieved 5 August 2019 Biography at The People Speak Radio Archived 15 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Woman Abuse Facts Replacing Myths Lewis Okun SUNY Press 1986 p 133 Casting Stones Prostitution and Liberation in Asia and the United States Rita Nakashima Brock Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite Fortress Press 1996 p 166 Destroying the World to Save It Aum Shinrikyo Apocalyptic Violence and the New Global Terrorism Owl Books 2000 ISBN missing Szimhart Joseph July August 2005 Thoughts on thought control Skeptical Inquirer 29 4 56 57 Le Fanu James 20 December 2004 Make up your mind The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 2 November 2008 dead link Hawkes Nigel 27 November 2004 Brainwashing by Kathleen Taylor The Times London Times Newspapers Ltd Retrieved 2 November 2008 Caterson Simon 2 May 2007 Hell to pay when man bites God The Australian p 4 Taylor Kathleen Eleanor December 2004 Brainwashing The Science of Thought Control Oxford University Press p 215 ISBN 978 0 19 280496 9 Retrieved 30 July 2009 Leo H Bartemeier 2011 Psychiatry and Public Affairs Aldine Transaction p 246 Clarke Peter 2004 Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements Routledge p 76 Sherman Fraser A 2010 Screen Enemies of the American Way Political paranoia about Nazis Communists Saboteurs Terrorists and Body Snatching Aliens in Film and Television McFarland Seed David 2004 Brainwashing A study in Cold War demonology Kent State University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 87338 813 9 Steven a k a Superant Mind control movies and TV listal com Retrieved 12 March 2016 Feeley Malcolm M Rubin Edward L 2000 Judicial Policy Making and the Modern State How the courts reformed America s prisons Cambridge University Press p 268 Ma Sheng mei 2012 Asian Diaspora and East West Modernity Purdue University Press p 129 Wolfe Gary K Williams Carol T 1983 The Majesty of Kindness The dialectic of Cordwainer Smith In Clareson Thomas D ed Voices for the Future Essays on major science fiction writers Vol 3 Popular Press pp 53 72 How Brainwashing Works HowStuffWorks 10 May 2006 Retrieved 13 September 2021 Schelde Per 1994 Androids Humanoids and other Science Fiction Monsters Science and soul in science fiction films NYU Press pp 169 175 ISBN 978 0585321172 O Brien Terry 2005 Westfahl Gary ed The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy Themes Works and Wonders Vol 1 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN missing External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brainwashing Wikiquote has quotations related to Brainwashing Look up mind control in Wiktionary the free dictionary Communist Interrogation Indoctrination and Exploitation of Prisoners of War 1956 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brainwashing amp oldid 1151866236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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