Cults and Society, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2001
"Mind Control" in New Religious
Movements and the American Psychological Association
Alberto Amitrani
Raffaella Di Marzio
Researchers and scholars in sociology and psychology
hold different positions concerning the existence of techniques of mental
manipulation inside New Religious Movements. Some deny it altogether;
others state that it definitely exists; yet others take on intermediate
positions, some more in one direction, others more in the other.
What is definitely harmful for balanced research in the
fields of sociology and psychology of religion is the unfortunate division
of scholars into two opposing camps. Some, in fact, behave as if they were
in a symbolic courtroom, where New Religious Movements are being judged,
or where freedom of religion is under discussion. In this hypothetical
courtroom, scholars play the roles of defense lawyers or public
prosecutors, instead of doing their job, which is that of investigating
and drawing up hypotheses for experimental verification.
When we started looking into the various positions of
scholars in order to try to understand the current situation of research
concerning theories of "mind control" or thought reform applied to New
Religious Movements, we chanced on certain statements, according to which
the whole matter seems to have already been settled, and no further
research appears to be necessary, as science has already given a final
reply.
Considering the complex nature of this issue, these
statements had a profound effect upon us, also because they were made by
scholars well known in Italy. The people whose articles and interviews we
referred to are generally recognized as experts in the field of New
Religious Movements. Nevertheless, in the specific issue we were dealing
with - the quotation and interpretation of the "Memo to the DIMPAC
Committee" - the authors we quoted had not behaved like experts, since
they had acted naively (there is always somebody who will check the
sources!): real experts, in fact, always refer the whole idea of a source
they quote.
These scholars told us that the last word had already
been said by one of the most prestigious professional associations in the
world, the
APA
(American Psychological Association), which has about 150.000
members. The final statement was supposed to have been made long ago, in
May 1987.
This, for example, is what Massimo Introvigne had to say
in an article published in Avvenire on January 2, 1997, p. 18,
titled "Ma il Cattolico non Va alla Setta:
... back in
1987, the American Psychological Association officially stated that
"brainwashing" theories - of the first or second generation - applied to
religious movements are not scientific, and US courts have ever since
rejected them systematically.
The same author repeats this allegation in an article
published on CESNUR's Web Site, "The Return of the Jacobins: The Report of
the Belgian Parliament Inquiry Committee on Cults":
...
opposition to the anti-cult model based on theories of mental manipulation
and brainwashing is virtually unanimous among both psychologists and
sociologists of religion. In 1987 the American Psychological Association -
probably the most authoritative body in the world in the field of
psychological sciences - published a document stating that the theories of
mental manipulation and brainwashing applied to new religious movements
lack in "scientific rigor" and must not be presented as scientific […]. No
"division in the academic world" therefore exists, dividing it into two
different fields, one favorable and one contrary to the theses of the
anti-cult movements. The overwhelming majority of academic researchers
reject these theses as not being scientific. (http://www.cesnur.org/testi/Belgique.htm)
The CESNUR Web Site also quotes from a report given at a
press conference at the National Press Club on December 1st, 1997 in
Washington, D.C. The report was entitled, "Religious Liberty in Western
Europe":
…On May 11,
1987 the Board rejected the report and concluded that the mind control
theories, used in order to distinguish "cults" from religions, are not
part of accepted psychological science. The results of this document were
devastating for mind control theories.
Another CESNUR member, Pier Luigi Zoccatelli, repeats
these ideas in an article published in the February 1997 issue of Il
Messaggero di S. Antonio, and reprinted on their Web Site. At the end
of this article, "Scientologia, Religione e Gnosticismo," the author says:
Today,
therefore, the crime of plagio [undue persuasion] no longer exists, and
the idea of bringing it back is hardly to be imagined. The same
conclusion, regarding "brainwashing" theories of both the first and second
generation…, was reached in 1987 by the authoritative American
Psychological Association, which called such theories "not scientific."
In a radio program called Lavori in Corso [Work
in Progress], broadcast on December 9, 1997 Mr. Introvigne said the
following:
... I do not
believe one should speak too quickly here of plagio [undue influence],
which our Constitutional Court in 1981 called a fictitious and
non-existent crime in 1981, or brainwashing, which the American
Psychological Association equally declared to be nonexistent in 1987.
In this specific case, he is actually claiming that APA
came to a final conclusion, according to which "brainwashing" theories are
not only lacking in the features needed to call a theory scientific, but
that these theories deal with a phenomenon which does not even exist.
During a TV transmission (the seventh edition of 7
volte 7 [7 time 7], broadcast by Telenova and Telesubalpina
and re-broadcast by Sat2000, the Italian Bishops' Conference
satellite TV, Mr. Introvigne said that the words, "cult" and
"brainwashing" or "mind control," are typical of anti-cult movements.
These movements supposedly use them as "sticks" with which to beat
minority religious movements. They are only a way of expressing religious
intolerance.
We could continue for a long time with quotes and
examples of lectures or programs of various kinds where such statements
were made.
The position of these Italian scholars is also shared by
other Italian and foreign scholars. This is a current in sociology and
psychology that opposes a different view of the problem, upheld by other
scholars who do not deny the existence of forms of conditioning in certain
religious movements, although in different degrees and with different
features, depending on the individual case.
What makes the reader or the listener immediately
inclined to accept the opinion of the "expert" is the mention of the
prestigious
APA. It is natural to think that, if such an important association
expressed a negative opinion on a theory, this theory cannot be scientific
and must be rejected.
However, common sense and experience in this field led
us to harbor some doubts about such absolute certainties. In a field as
complex and controversial as that of psychology, acquiring certainties is
truly difficult. For this reason, we wondered whether the famous official
APA document actually said what it was supposed to have said.
We therefore started a long and difficult search for a
document that, considering its importance, should have been easily
available to everybody, especially to those who quote it on their own Web
site.
We therefore explicitly asked CESNUR (which claims to
have a library of over 10.000 books) for a copy of the document.
Inexplicably, they referred us to their American colleague, Gordon
Melton. Dr. Melton, whom we repeatedly contacted by e-mail, never sent
the document, although he said he had it and was ready to fax it to us.
1
We then decided to go to the source, and contacted - by
e-mail - several members of
APA (including Department Chiefs), asking for a copy of the
document. We were very surprised that none of these people were able to
place this document, so important for deciding the fate of a scientific
theory. We were told that the document exists but is not easy to find.
Thanks to the admirable help of members and officers of this Association,
we received a considerable quantity of bibliography on the issue of "mind
control" applied to New Religious Movements.
This help, together with that of Dr. Michael Langone of
AFF and of Dr. Benjamin Zablocki (a Rutgers University sociologist who
published an article in
Nova Religio -- "The Blacklisting of a Concept: The Strange
History of the Brainwashing Conjecture in the Sociology of Religion")
helped us to increase our knowledge and to clear up many issues which had
been left in the dark.
After two months of research on the Internet, we were
finally able to obtain a photocopy of the document by fax from the USA.
(The document is on our Web site at
http://www.grisroma.it/inglese/Memo_11-05-87.htm.) We can now
clarify some basic points:
The document opens and closes thanking the Task Force
(DIMPAC - Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Methods of Persuasion and
Control) for its job, and openly expresses the enormous difficulty
involved in coming to a final report on such a complex and controversial
issue. No polemics against those who had done the job, rather the
acknowledgement of the job they had done, which the Board, while not
agreeing, did appreciate.
The report drawn up by DIMPAC was examined by two
outside experts and by two members of the
APA committee called Board of Social and Ethical Responsibility
for Psychology (BSERP). They found the DIMPAC report lacking in scientific
rigor and in an impartial critical approach needed to obtain APA approval.
The report was therefore unanimously rejected by 4 people (only 2 of whom
belonged to APA).
The main point of the document is this: the Memorandum
expresses no official rejection of mind control theories, but only rejects
a report drawn up buy a committee on the issue of mental manipulation
theories as applied to New Religious Movements. This rejection was due to
a lack of proper methods.
The memo called on DIMPAC members to avoid stating that
APA shared the conclusions of their report.
The most important part of the memo, which is the part
that interests us, says:
Finally,
after much consideration, BSERP does not believe that we have sufficient
information available to guide us in taking a position on this issue.
The CESNUR Web site now includes a copy of the complete
memo. However, the scholars we mentioned seem to have forgotten about
this sentence of the memo, which is certainly not a secondary one. Yet
this sentence, which does exist, does not appear in any of the documents
we quoted.
Indeed, Dr. Langone told us (Personal Communication)
that in a deposition he was once handed a copy of the memo that did not
have the last paragraph. It apparently had been eliminated through the
photocopy process. (Being a member of the Task Force, Dr. Langone had
received an original copy of the memo, which had the missing paragraph.)
This therefore is the truth, and it is quite different
from what we were told:
APA, a professional Association of great domestic and
international importance, has never taken a clear and official stand on
theories of thought reform and mind control as applied to New Religious
Movements. It has taken a waiting stand, and rejects the positions of both
sides. The reason is clearly stated in the memo: sufficient scientifically
validated research and hypotheses are lacking, so a final answer cannot be
given to this question.
The saddest part of this story is that APA quite
properly asked "mind control" theorists not to say that the Association
shared their opinions. However they did not then realize that that small
Memo, that relatively unimportant note, could be manipulated by
others and presented as an official APA rejection of the existence of
mental manipulation in New Religious Movements. The latter have made of
this note a flag to rally around, quoting only part of a document, which -
although of only relative importance - deserves to be quoted in full.
Anybody who is considered, and considers himself, an objective and
acknowledged expert in this field should be aware of this fact.
An Examination of the Relevant Documents
In case there are any doubts, let us
examine this issue in more detail.
In an article, "Liar! Liar!,"
(published on the CESNUR Web site at
http://www.cesnur.org/gandow_eng.htm) Massimo Introvigne says:
In the early 1980s, some U.S. mental
health professionals became controversial figures for their involvement
as expert witnesses in court cases against new religious movements,
during which they presented their anti-cult theories of brainwashing,
mind control, or "coercive persuasion" as if they were generally
accepted concepts within the scientific community. In the meantime, in
1983, the American Psychological Association (APA) had accepted the
proposal to form a task force called DIMPAC (Deceptive and Indirect
Methods of Persuasion and Control).
This statement could lead one to think
that the Task Force called DIMPAC was set up as a sort of "commission of
enquiry" on certain "controversial" psychologists and psychiatrists.
However, the documents we have show
that this was not what happened (Letter
with attached Memorandum dated July 12th 1983 signed by the then
Administrative Officer of the BSERP, Arnold S. Kahn).
In fact, the 6-page Memorandum
attached to the letter (where the establishment of the Task Force is
proposed) specifies the purposes of the Task Force and, hence, the job APA
appointed it do:
-
Investigate
the techniques of psychological coercion.
-
Decide
whether one can or must, or cannot or must not, impose restrictions on
the use of techniques and principles of psychological coercion used by
psychologists and nonpsychologists in a manner abusive of individual or
constitutional rights.
-
Establish the
conditions under which use of such techniques is more or less
appropriate. "The charge to the Task Force will be to define the
parameters and limits to which coercive psychological techniques may be
used before invoking the principle of the ‘need to protect the
individual.’ "
Further on, the document says that the
APA is especially interested in these techniques being used to promote
individual well-being. What particularly interests the Association is the
fact that
techniques of
indoctrination, ‘brainwashing’ and "coercive persuasion" have not been
subject to the same scrutiny as other psychological techniques ... Such
techniques are currently being used by religious cults (e.g., the
Unification Church, the Church of Scientology, etc.) as well as
nonreligious organizations (e.g., est, Lifespring, etc.).
The Memo then remarks on the
importance of undertaking this enquiry in the light of the increasing
involvement of psychologists in disputes associated with cults, for
example in the courts, where psychologists were often called in as
witnesses (two cases are mentioned involving the Unification Church and
the Church of Scientology). The memo then mentions so-called "training
seminars," such as est and Lifespring. Further on, the Memorandum says:
It is quite clear that
many of the religious organizations have been involved in recruitment
techniques which are the equivalent of psychological assessment. It would
appear that these techniques need to be well defined and, if certain
people are a high risk, that these people need to be warned with regard to
potential harm. The fundamental issue facing psychology is a determination
of whether or not certain people need to be protected from coercive
psychological techniques. It may be impossible to discuss this aspect of
the abuse of coercive psychological techniques without discussing
legalistic implications. A thorough discussion of coercive techniques and
the possible need for recommendations in order to protect the public would
be in the best interest of psychology.
The part regarding the outcome of the
study performed by the Task Force also expresses the hope that something
may be published in the future concerning this issue.
This document, then, shows that the
Task Force was set up, not to put an end to the "anti- cult" activities of
some psychologist, but for reasons of public interest, in order to
safeguard the psychological welfare of individuals who might be subject to
coercive psychological techniques, either in NRM's or in other
organizations.
An Extraordinary "Slip"?
Mr. Introvigne also says in "Liar!
Liar!":
DIMPAC pursued its work
for some years, whilst Dr. Singer and other professionals continued to
appear as expert witnesses in court cases using their coercive persuasion
and brainwashing theories. Dissatisfied with this continuing state of
affairs, "on February 5, 1987, during its winter meeting, the APA Board of
Directors voted for APA to participate in the [Molko ] case as an amicus"
(American Psychological Association, Memorandum on APA’s activities
regarding the Molko case, July 11, 1989, p. 1) […] The brief stated that
as applied to new religious movements, the theory of coercive persuasion
"is not accepted in the scientific community" and that the relevant
methodology "has been repudiated by the scientific community."
This reconstruction would lead the
reader to think that the submission of the amicus brief (which denied the
validity of coercive persuasion theories) was brought about by an
unbearable situation, in which the Task Force was still going on with its
proceedings, while psychologists and psychiatrists continued to make
absurd statements in the courts, presented as if they had a scientific
foundation.
However,
the documents we have show that this was not what happened:
Firstly, the
Memorandum attached to the letter of July 12th, 1983, states
that the Task Force started its full proceedings in 1984, and that such
proceedings would take two or three years, depending on the time required
to draw up the final report.
Secondly, concerning the amicus
brief approved by some APA board members, submitted on February 10th,
1987, and then soon withdrawn, this whole matter would appear to be much
less "clear" if it were presented in other terms.
For
example, one could say that while the APA was waiting to review the report
of the Task Force (which APA itself had set up and appointed Dr. Margaret
Singer to run) some of its directors decided to sign the famous amicus
brief in the name of APA (some even claim that this document was approved
on the basis of a round of phone calls and with no in-depth examination).
All of this, of course, without consulting the Task Force that had been
set up for the very purpose of studying something that the APA board
members now suddenly decided did not exist! Considering the situation,
one can hardly say that APA stood out for transparency; it looked rather
as if its right hand knew not what the left did. With such an embarrassing
situation, APA quickly withdrew the amicus brief and then, after a
few months, rejected the report by the Task Force. When one sees the facts
in this light, the submission and then withdrawal of the amicus
brief could well be seen as an attempt by APA to free itself as quickly as
possible of a "hot potato."
Even
though the APA withdrew from the battlefield, some people today still try
to pass the Molko amicus brief matter across as if it had represented a
stand taken by the Association. Such an attempt of course helps the
NRM's, but not scientific accuracy.
Among those who protested against the
presentation of the amicus brief was Dr. L. J. West who wrote a
letter (signed by about two dozen UCLA psychologists) to Dr. Bonnie
Strickland, then President of APA. She answered this and other letters by
saying that the whole issue of "coercive persuasion" was still awaiting
discussion by the members of the Association, in order to achieve a more
profound understanding of the use and abuse of social influence.
Introvigne then says in "Liar!
Liar!":
APA subsequently withdrew
from the case "based on procedural as opposed to substantive concerns" and
"never rejected the brief on the ground that it was inaccurate in
substance."
This does not however seem to mean
that APA officially approved the contents of the brief, i.e., the
notion that the theory of coercive persuasion applied to NRM's is not
accepted by the scientific community. If it never rejected it, neither did
it ever approve it officially, turning it into the final stand of
the whole Association. The only indisputable fact is that APA withdrew the
brief and never presented it again.
There is only one way to prove the
contrary: to bring out an official APA document - if it exists - which
states that that brief, as it was drawn up in 1987, has received the
imprimatur of the Association, decreeing the end of scientific debate on
"coercive persuasion."
Even so, people would still have the
right to think differently, since APA, however prestigious it may be, does
not in any case represent all the psychologists on earth, nor is America
necessarily and always the model to follow.
Let us take a further look into the
about face of the APA, by examining the Memo of July 12th, 1989, sent by
R.D. Fowler, Chief Executive Officer of the APA, to Dr. W. D’Antonio. This
document explains some of the reasons the brief was withdrawn:
Fowler mentions a letter, dated May
17th, 1989, from Dr. Richard Ofshe to Dr. D’Antonio. On page 2 of his
letter, Ofshe had said that the APA brief improperly slipped through the
APA’s administrative structure… and [was] filed by the former executive
director of APA despite objections by APA’s legal counsel."
After having denied this statement by
Ofshe, Fowler says that the Executive Director of APA resigned after the
episode, but that "…the APA Executive Director did not resign because a
brief was filed in the case." In light of all that had transpired, we
cannot help but wonder why the APA director resigned.
Fowler also mentions another letter by
Dr. Ofshe, of June 14th, 1989 in which Ofshe says he was invited, together
with Dr. Singer, to attend a symposium organized by APA's Division 1. The
Symposium concerned coercive persuasion and its clinical, ethical,
cultural, and legal implications. Somebody of course might wonder, "Why
did APA invite to a symposium two scholars who had supposedly been
entirely discredited by their Association after the rejection of the
DIMPAC report and the submission of the amicus brief?" Perhaps
pre-empting such a possible question, Fowler contends that the attendance
at the symposium by the two scholars did not have the meaning Ofshe
implies:
This statement is
somewhat misleading in that this is not an APA sponsored symposium. Drs.
Singer and Dr. Ofshe were invited by Division 1 (one of forty plus APA
Divisions) to participate in a Division 1 sponsored Symposium.
If we take Fowler's statement into
account, we can still ask: "If a single Division of APA does not represent
the whole Association, then can't we also say that four experts (the
number of people reviewing the DIMPAC report), only two of whom were APA
members, do not represent the views of the whole Association?
From the same document, we also learn
that APA's decision not to get back into the case after the rejection of
the DIMPAC report was due to "… budget constraints and other pressing
business." These rather surprising motives could lead us to think, as
Prof. Benjamin Zablocki puts it, that it was:
... simply a matter of
trying to put the best possible public face on what was an embarrassing
situation for the cult apologists. Neither the cult apologists nor the
cult bashers had enough votes in the APA to force through whichever
measure each side would have wanted. Instead there was a face-saving
compromise in which the APA essentially washed its hands of the entire
matter—quite properly, in my opinion. Big national professional
organizations like the ASA or the APA have no business taking political
stands of any sort as long as there is substantial disagreement within the
membership even if one side can get 51% of the votes and the other only
49%"… The APA's action in denying cult apologists' request to support the
amicus was an implicit act of censure. (personal e-mail communication)
Spring Follies
Introvigne also says in "Liar!
Liar!":
In fact, although Singer
later claimed that all drafts were still provisional and that she needed
more time, by the end of 1986 APA's BSERP had submitted the latest draft
of the DIMPAC report both to internal reviewers and to two outside
academics, namely Dr. Jeffrey D. Fisher and Dr. Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi …It
would also not do to state that BSERP unfairly evaluated a provisional
draft of the report. 1986-87 correspondence shows that the text was the
"final draft of the report, minus the reference list" (letter from Dorothy
Thomas, executive assistant at BSERP, December 29, 1986)."
This
reconstruction seems to show that Dr Singer continued arbitrarily claiming
that DIMPAC was merely a draft, absurdly asking for more time to go on
with the proceedings of the Task Force.
However, the documents we have show
that this was not what happened.
The
Memorandum of December 29th, 1986 from Dorothy Thomas
and addressed to the Task Force with the title "Final draft of Task Force
Report," says that, in the meeting held from October 31st to November 2nd
1986, the final draft of the report had been examined by the members of
BSERP. Ms. Thomas states:
For the most part, they
felt it was a good report. However, because of the magnitude of the issues
involved, BSERP decided to send the report out for independent review by a
number of people who are knowledgeable in this area. BSERP members were
also asked to give the report a more careful review (the final draft
version was available to members at the meeting) and to prepare comments
for further discussion of the report at their May 1987 meeting. … BSERP
will decide on a process for finalizing the report in the spring.
In other words, this was no absurd
claim by Dr. Singer, but a reality based on this document, which she and
other Task Force members had received. The phrase, "final draft version,"
here clearly implies that this was not the finished report, which was to
have been prepared after the BSERP discussion in the spring.
So we are left to ask: "What happened
between December 29th, 1986 and May 11th, 1987?" What could have induced
the BSERP to change its orientation and its work schedule concerning the
Task Force so drastically?
All we can do is list some facts,
without claiming to be able to answer the question:
-
The
Memo of December 29th, 1986 advises of the "change of the
guard" at the leadership of the SER (Office of Social and Ethical
Responsibility); the new director was to come into office on January
5th, 1987.
-
Barely one month later, on February
5th, 1987, the APA directors presented an amicus brief stating the
nonexistence of "coercive persuasion."
-
On March 24th, 1987, APA withdrew
from this very amicus brief and never signed on again.
-
On May 11th, 1987 BSERP (which had
called the Task Force report "good" at the end of October) rejected it
during the Meeting which had been scheduled to discuss its final
draft and to establish the criteria for completing it.
Any comment, at this point, would be
truly unnecessary!
Legerdemain
In "Liar! Liar!" Introvigne says:
When one reads the
enclosures and considers the whole controversy, it becomes clear that the
issue not resolved by the 1987 Memorandum is the much larger issue of
unethical behavior and misrepresentations in persuasion processes, a
problem not exclusive to the field of new religious movements or "cults."
Unethical behavior and false representation may occur quite independently
of any brainwashing, coercive persuasion, or mind control practices, both
in religion and in psychotherapy … It is on larger issues of this kind,
rather than on brainwashing as allegedly practiced by new religious
movements, that BSERP experts disagreed among themselves, and BSERP was
not in a position to reach a definitive conclusion.
Even after reading the enclosures and
all the other documents several times over, we cannot honestly
share this interpretation of the expression of the Memo of May 11, 1987.
Recall that this document concluded: "Finally, after much consideration,
BSERP does not believe that we have sufficient information available to
guide us in taking a position on this issue."
Today, this document seems to have
achieved an extraordinary fame and some people have interpreted it in
quite creative ways. But if the Task Force, according to the
Memorandum attached to the letter of July 12th, 1983 (which is
the document which set the Task Force up and defined its mission), was
supposed to investigate possible abuses of psychologically coercive
techniques among religious cults and training seminars, then it is quite
clear what the "issue" to be examined was. When BSERP rejected the DIMPAC
report because of its methodological faults, its lack of scientific rigor,
it added that it could not express any opinion concerning the broader
issue, which the Task Force was supposed to investigate, since it did not
have enough information.
Our interpretation of this matter,
which had been ignored for ten years and is now the subject of so much
attention, seems to us to be much closer to the facts and to the
documents.
Although the scientific validity of
the subject matter studied by DIMPAC has not changed, i.e. techniques of
"coercive persuasion," this does not necessarily mean that everything that
was ever written about it is free of defects. The rejection of one
scientific report on a phenomenon does not cancel the existence of such a
phenomenon.
Prof. Zablocki has this to say about
the matter:
In my opinion, the DIMPAC
committee went too far in the other direction by asking the APA to affirm
that brainwashing in religious cults was a proven psychological fact. It
was for this that they were censured. It is not true that the APA affirmed
the contrary, that brainwashing was disproved. Instead, the APA argued
that it could not go along with EITHER SIDE in this matter. I would say
that neither side got what it wanted from the APA. As an organization
representing ALL psychologists in the USA, it took a proper agnostic
position that no final decision could be given at this time. (personal
e-mail communication)
The Division 36 Resolution
It is interesting to note that those
who proclaim APA's "rejection" of "brainwashing" theories have never, so
far as we know, mentioned a later attempt to persuade APA to take a stand
on this issue. At its annual convention in 1990 a "Resolution on
Brainwashing Testimony" was submitted to APA Division 36 (then called
Psychologists Interested in Religious Issues, now called Psychology of
Religion). After hearing from both sides on the issue, the directors of
Division 36 approved a resolution that clearly does not place APA
on the side of either of the parties who have taken different sides in
court cases.
The Executive Committee
of the Division of Psychologists Interested in Religious Issues supports
the conclusion that, at this time, there is no consensus that sufficient
psychological research exists to scientifically equate undue non-physical
persuasion (otherwise known as "coercive persuasion," "mind control," or
"brainwashing") with techniques of influence as typically practiced by one
or more religious groups. Further, the Executive Committee invites those
with research on this topic to submit proposals to present their work at
Divisional programs. (PIRI Executive Committee Adopts Position on
Non-Physical Persuasion Winter, 1991)
In its subsequent issue, the Division
36 Newsletter published a letter by AFF President, Herbert
Rosedale, Esq., and AFF Executive Director, Dr. Michael Langone. Rosedale
and Langone say:
For hundreds of years
social considerations have allowed testimony to be admitted to invalidate
a Will by showing undue influence by a person who benefits from a bequest
in the Will. In cases dealing with sexual abuse and the manipulation of
those with an impaired capacity to make independent judgments,
psychologists frequently testify that certain action, which on its face
appears to be voluntary and consensual, lacks certain necessary elements
of such consent.
The Division's draft resolution appears to have been a
transparent attempt to block expert testimony that may enhance a deceived
or defrauded person's capacity to obtain legal redress from groups
practicing extreme forms of sociopsychological influence.
After receiving correspondence from the undersigned and
colleagues, the Division's leadership implicitly recognized the above
points by, in the official resolution, acknowledging the existence of
extreme influence and avoiding any insinuation that expert testimony
should not be allowed. . . We applaud the directors for correcting these
serious errors. (Psychologists Interested in Religious Issues. (Rosedale &
Langone, 1991, 8-9)
In using the words, "undue
non-physical persuasion (otherwise known as `coercive persuasion,' `mind
control,' or `brainwashing')" the Division 36 resolution clearly
acknowledges the existence of the phenomenon that others claimed
APA rejected. The resolution also made clear that "there is no consensus"
regarding whether or not scientific research demonstrates that certain
religious groups practice "brainwashing."
This resolution probably disturbs some
cult critics as well as those who have touted APA's "rejection" of
"brainwashing." However, it is an accurate statement about the state of
affairs in the profession. The relationship of "brainwashing" theories
and New Religious Movements is a subject on which scientists dispute, not
one on which the "book has been closed."
Conclusion
We have reason to believe that APA,
today like ten years ago, still considers "psychological coercion " to be
a phenomenon worth investigating, and not a notion rejected by the
scientific community.
Otherwise, why would people such as
Margaret Singer, Michael Langone, and others considered to be
"anti-cultists" contribute to APA Conventions and be respected in other
prestigious professional bodies as well? For example, Margaret Singer has
published an article on these issues in the Merck Manual, the
"Bible" of Medicine. The same scholar, together with L. J. West, published
in the Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry, a prestigious textbook
of Psychiatry. Richard Ofshe wrote about thought reform in the
Encyclopedia of Sociology after ASA and APA withdrew their support for
the Amicus brief in 1987. In 1996 Dr. Langone and colleagues presented a
paper on their research with the Group Psychological Abuse Scale to APA's
Division 36.
If such examples do not reflect the
respect that the scientific community feels towards these scholars, how
are we to interpret them?
In May 1997, the APA Monitor
ran an interesting column, "What
Messages are Behind Today's Cults?" by Stanford's Dr. Philip
Zimbardo, a former president of APA. Dr. Zimbardo, who in 1989 (after the
Task Force report had been rejected) appeared on an APA program with Drs.
Singer, Langone, and others, says:
Whatever any member of a
cult has done, you and I could be recruited or seduced into doing -- under
the right or wrong conditions. The majority of normal, average,
intelligent individuals can be led to engage in immoral, illegal,
irrational, aggressive and self destructive actions that are contrary to
their values or personality -- when manipulated situational conditions
exert their power over individual dispositions.
These are the facts, and they could
not be otherwise, since the American Psychological Association, will never
be able to avoid investigating the problem of manipulation inside certain
groups and NRMs. These may be seen as special manifestations of the same
processes of social influence that take place in daily life. Whether or
not we use a theory such as "coercive persuasion" to describe such extreme
forms of social influence, located along a continuum of differing
intensity, is an issue which can and must be discussed with intellectual
honesty in a professional association of psychologists.
Professor Zablocki has this to say
about the position of APA and ASA on the issue of brainwashing theories:
Many people have been
misled about the true position of the APA and the ASA with regard to
brainwashing. Like so many other theories in the behavioral sciences, the
jury is still out on this one. The APA and the ASA acknowledge that some
scholars believe that brainwashing exists but others believe that it does
not exist. The ASA and the APA acknowledge that nobody is currently in a
position to make a Solomonic decision as to which group is right and which
group is wrong. Instead they urge scholars to do further research to
throw more light on this matter. I think this is a reasonable position to
take. (personal e-mail communication)
This is our position too. Absolute
scientific truth does not exist. If scholars continue researching, with
intellectual honesty and scientific rigor, they will perhaps find a way to
do something useful to prevent damage to weaker individuals within certain
pseudo-religious movements, while at the same time safeguarding the
freedom of conscience of every human being and the right of everybody to
practice and spread his religious faith.
Launching "Memo Wars," on the other
hand, does not help to reach the truth. Indeed, it creates an overheated
climate which does not encourage scholars to look at the present or the
future with the confidence and open-mindedness of those who share the
motto that used to appear on the documents of the APA: "Advancing
psychology as a science, a profession, and as a means of promoting human
welfare."
Notes
1. According to CESNUR,
the diffusion of the documents of the APA controversy had been vetoed by
the lawyers of those accused by Margaret Singer of having engaged in a
criminal conspiracy against her, including APA officers and several
scholars. CESNUR acknowledges that it was our article that allowed it to
prevail upon these lawyers and to post on CESNUR’s Web site most of the
documents, including the DIMPAC report and two annexes to the 1987 APA
Memorandum, which had never been published before.
References
American Psychological Association, Board
of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology (1987, May 11).
Memo to the DIMPAC Committee. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological
Association.
Chambers, William V., Langone, Michael D.,
& Malinoski, Peter. (1996, August 12). The Group Psychological Abuse
Scale. Paper presented to Division 36 (Psychology of Religion) at the
American Psychological Association Annual Meeting, Toronto, Canada.
Fowler, Raymond D. (1989, July 12). Memo
to Dr. W. D'Antonio. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological
Association.
Introvigne, Massimo. (1997, January 2).
Ma il cattolico no va alla setta. Avvenire, 18.
Introvigne, Massimo. (1997). Le retour
des Jacobins. www.cesnur.org/test/Belgique.htm.
Introvigne, Massimo. (1998). Liar! Liar!:
Brainwashing, CESNUR and APA.
www.cesnur.org/testi/gandow_eng.htm.
Kahn, Arnold. (1983, July 12).
Memorandum. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, Board
of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology. http://www.grisroma.it/inglese/Memo_12-07-83.htm.
Ofshe, Richard. (1992). Coercive
persuasion and attitude change. In E. F. Borgatta & M. L. Borgatta
(Eds.), Encyclopedia of sociology. (pp. 212-224). New York:
MacMillan.
PIRI Executive Committee Adopts Position
on Non-Physical Persuasion. (1991, Winter). Newsletter, 16(1),
3. (APA Division 36 Newsletter, Psychologists Interested in Religious
Issues).
Religious Liberty in Western Europe.
(1997, December 1). Report released by CESNUR at a press conference
held in Washington, D.C. at the National Press Club.
http://www.cesnur.org/testi/Washington.htm.
Rosedale, Herbert L., & Langone, Michael
D. (1991, Spring). Letter to the Editor. Newsletter, 16(2),
8-9. (APA Division 36 Newsletter, Psychologists Interested in Religious
Issues)
Singer, Margaret T. (1986). Group
psychodynamics. In R. Berkow (Ed.), The Merck manual of diagnosis
and therapy (15th ed.), (pp. 1467-1471). Rahway, NJ:
Merck.
Thomas, Dorothy. (1986, December 29).
Memorandum. Washington: D.C.: American Psychological Association, Board
of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology.
http://www.grisroma.it/inglese/Memo_29-12-86.
West, Louis J., & Singer, Margaret T.
(1980). Cults, quacks, and nonprofessional psychotherapies. In
Friedman, H. I. Kaplan, A.M. Freedman, & B. J. Saddock (Eds.)
Comprehensive textbook of psychiatry, III. (pp. 3245-3258).
Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins
Zablocki, Benjamin. (1997). The
blacklisting of a concept: The strange history of the brainwashing
conjecture in the sociology of religion. Nova Religio: The Journal
of Alternative and Emergent Religions, 1(1), 96-121.
Zimbardo, Phillip. (1997, May).
What messages are behind today's cults. Monitor.
Washington, D.C., American Psychological Association.
Zoccatelli, Pier Luigi. (1997,
February). Scientologia, religione, e gnosticismo. Il Messaggero di S. Antonio.
|