Post
by apophenia » Mon Oct 10, 2011 9:55 pm
Regarding the OP, de-programming is just another name for reverse brainwashing, and brainwashing, reverse or otherwise, is never appropriate simply because you don't like what a person believes or because it is an efficient means to bring about ends important to you. Brainwashing is brainwashing, and it should be criminal in whatever context. What's next? De-programming children as they go through public schools so that they actually like being heavily taxed? "The end justifies the means. But what if there never is an end? All we have is means.” (Ursula K Le Guin, The Lathe Of Heaven)
For what it's worth, imo, atheists, secularists, humanists, Buddhists, it doesn't matter, all are in important senses equally deluded. The human animal isn't geared for truth, only survival and reproduction, and that difference reframes the entire question of what purpose our beliefs serve and what methods of choosing beliefs serve those ends. Humans are emotional and social first, and rational third - if indeed one can put reason that high up in the rankings. A staple of bounded rationality is that cognitive algorithms which produce optimal solutions would be so prohibitively expensive brain and time wise to an animal as to make them essentially useless. The brain makes educated guesses, based on a built in assumption of uniformity of nature and other environmental invariants, which probabilistically yields useful results (again, useful, not true, but useful - to survival and reproduction).
I had another point to make, but the tea kettle is whistling and I am called away. Maybe I'll think of it later.
ETA: I remember!
We recently discussed a book about Scientology and the term "cult" came up rather quickly in the conversation. I attempted to corner those using the term as, in my words at the time, it is a word that is over-used and underdefined. The only stable meaning that seemed to rise to the surface was that a cult was a religion with one of the three following characteristics:
1) unpopularity - it was not liked by more mainstream religions or people,
2) numbers - the religion has a small number of adherents, relatively speaking, and is not well established,
3) newness - the newer a religion, the more likely it is accorded a cult (e.g. Scientology, versus Mormonism versus Christianity)
In my view, these are the essential criteria by which people sieve religions into cult or non-cult status, and in my view, they are wholly meaningless and inappropriate for it. (Some raised the question of Hubbard's intent in founding Scientology as a separate criteria, but that, is another discussion).
