Diane Benscoter: How cults rewire the brain
Diane Benscoter: Como os cultos reconfiguram o cérebro
Diane Benscoter, an ex-Moonie, is now invested in finding ways to battle extremist mentalities and their potentially deadly consequences. Full bio
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numa caminhada pela paz.
é que a maioria daquelas pessoas
já tinha acontecido,
escolhida e preparada por Deus
feliz com isto.
naquela época.
para um lugar seguro.
para um lugar seguro.
com eles durante uma semana.
de fazer este trabalho.
"Como é que isto me aconteceu?"
aconteceu ao meu cérebro?
um livro, um livro de memórias,
morreram naquele dia,
enquanto morriam.
para eles.
pode chegar ao ponto
o cérebro trabalha desta forma,
através do genocídio.
Como é que funciona?
que se replica no cérebro humano
e causar mais danos em pessoas
comprometido.
complexas, são bastante atrativas
vulneráveis.
todos os problemas do mundo.
é seguir humildemente.
a guerra e a fome."
Ele vai resolver tudo."
expandir-se exponencialmente,
para o interior do cérebro.
ou qualquer outro,
espírito crítico, regularmente.
muito diferentes.
a fazer é reconhecer
Ou um problema científico, se preferirem.
nenhuma força do mal por detrás disto.
através da pesquisa e educação,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Diane Benscoter - DeprogrammerDiane Benscoter, an ex-Moonie, is now invested in finding ways to battle extremist mentalities and their potentially deadly consequences.
Why you should listen
At 17, Diane Benscoter joined The Unification Church -- the religious cult whose members are commonly known as “Moonies.” After five long years, her distressed family arranged to have her deprogrammed. Benscoter then left The Unification Church, and was so affected by her experience that she became a deprogrammer herself. She devoted her time to extracting others from cults, until she was arrested for kidnapping. The shock of her arrest caused her to abandon her efforts for almost 20 years.
Now, after decades of research and study, Diane has begun to speak about her experiences. She recently completed a memoir describing her years as a member of The Unification Church and as a deprogrammer.
Furthermore, she has embarked on a new project to define “extremist viral memetic infections”. She believes that defining extremism as a memetic infection, from a cognitive neurological perspective, might allow us to develop better memes that would inoculate against the memes of extremist thought. These inoculating memes could prevent the spread of extremist viral memetic infections and their inherent dangers.
Diane Benscoter | Speaker | TED.com