Constructing Cultist “Mind Control”

Allegations against religious movements for using “mind control” to produce “forced conversions” are interpretive. Underlying such interpretations are a number of assumptions, definitions, epis-temological rules and conventions of reasoning and rhetoric. These include: (1) The simultaneous employmen...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Sociological analysis
Main Author: Robbins, Thomas 1943-2015 (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: 1984
In: Sociological analysis
Year: 1984, Volume: 45, Issue: 3, Pages: 241-256
Online Access: Volltext (JSTOR)
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Summary:Allegations against religious movements for using “mind control” to produce “forced conversions” are interpretive. Underlying such interpretations are a number of assumptions, definitions, epis-temological rules and conventions of reasoning and rhetoric. These include: (1) The simultaneous employment of a critical external perspective to evaluate processes within religious movements and an empathic internal perspective to interpret social control processes impinging on religious movements (e.g., deprogramming); (2) An “epistemological manicheanism” which takes the accounts of hostile ex-converts at face value while nullifying the accounts of current devotees as manipulated false consciousness; (3) The employment of a broad and poorly bounded concept of “coercion”; (4) The assumption that it is coercive or reprehensibly deviant for messianic movements to “target” unhappy or otherwise “vulne.able” persons; and (5) Exaggeration of the extent and consequences of deceptive proselytization. Mirror opposite premises may operate in sophisticated defenses of stigmatized movements. The debate over mental coercion will necessarily be inconclusive because it is constituted in terms of arbitrary premises, definitions, interpretive frameworks and epistemological rules.
ISSN:2325-7873
Contains:Enthalten in: Sociological analysis
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.2307/3711480