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Dive into the research topics where Dick Anthony is active.

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Featured researches published by Dick Anthony.


American Behavioral Scientist | 1977

Patients and Pilgrims Changing Attitudes Toward Psychotherapy of Converts to Eastern Mysticism

Dick Anthony; Thomas Robbins; Madeline Doucas; Thomas E. Curtis

The eastern mystical traditions movement into American life is depicted in this paper, which reports on the intriguing pattern of changing attitudes toward the use of psychotherapy among many members of the two major groups studied and also suggests a new rationale to justify psychotherapy.


Terrorism and Political Violence | 1995

Religious totalism, violence and exemplary dualism: Beyond the extrinsic model

Dick Anthony; Thomas Robbins

This study presents an alternative psychological model to the ‘extrinsic model’. The latter emphasizes the external imposition through brainwashing of a pattern of depersonalization facilitating the enslavement of participants in totalist sects. An alternative approach can be extrapolated from the writings of Robert Lifton and more particularly, Erik Eriksons original conception of totalism. We suggest that contemporary cultural fragmentation exacerbates patterns of identity confusion and narcissistic ‘split self dynamics. Some young persons voluntarily attempt to resolve identity confusion through identification with messianic leaders and their apocalyptic absolutist mystiques. The ‘Exemplary Dualist’ worldviews of such groups facilitate ‘contrast identities’ which project disvalued elements of self onto ‘enemies’ including unbelievers. Emergent projective systems are unstable and may require reinforcement through appropriate interactions with outsiders, for example, converting them. Other vicissitudes ...


Terrorism and Political Violence | 2002

Cult and Anticult Totalism: Reciprocal Escalation and Violence

Dick Anthony; Thomas Robbins; Steven Barrie-Anthony

Millenarian movements have been involved in a number of recent episodes of collective homicidal, or suicidal violence. One result has been an intensification of the stigma which had already been attached to ‘cults’ and to the menace of cultic ‘mind control’ or ‘brainwashing’, which is viewed in some quarters as a linchpin of such groups’ violent proclivities. The stigma seems presently to be particularly powerful in Western Europe and in China, where the prosecutorial cult/brainwashing discourse, imported (like many ‘cults’) from the United States, has become influential. This discourse has been taken up by official public commissions of inquiry and has influenced legislation in France. A variety of heterogeneous and non-violent groups have been assumed in Europe to be similar to the sensationally violent Order of the Solar Temple, which is viewed as the ‘quintessential cult’. Several social scientists have recently argued that while sensational claims about ‘brainwashing’ in ‘cults’ are misleading and (to use legal jargon) more prejudicial than probative, nevertheless religio–ideological totalism, which is a frequent element in claims about ‘mind control’, certainly exists and can in certain circumstances and in conjunction with other elements have dysfunctional and polarizing consequences and may sometimes be related to violence and other problems. This article builds on recent discussions by the authors of the psychology of apocalyptic totalism and the issue of violence (see note 4) and also extrapolates the statement of Robert Lifton that ‘totalism begets 10


Archive | 2004

Pseudoscience versus Minority Religions

Dick Anthony; Thomas Robbins

This chapter evaluates the scientific status of the cultic brainwashing perspective of the French psychiatrist Jean-Marie Abgrall, who appears to be playing a similar role in anti-cult crusading in Europe to that which was earlier played in the United States by American psychologist Margaret Singer (Singer, with Lalich, 1995). Abgrall has emerged as a key “cult expert”1 because he was the first psychiatrist in France willing to embrace brainwashing theories. Abgrall has been involved in dozens of legal cases and has become the foremost expert on sects and cults in France and even Europe.


Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion | 1982

In gods we trust : new patterns of religious pluralism in America

Thomas Robbins; Dick Anthony


Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion | 1972

Getting Straight With Meher Baba: A Study of Mysticism, Drug Rehabilitation and Postadolescent Role Conflict

Thomas Robbins; Dick Anthony


Sociological Quarterly | 1974

Youth Culture Religious Movements: Evaluating the Integrative Hypothesis*

Thomas Robbins; Dick Anthony; Thomas E. Curtis


Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion | 1973

The Limits of Symbolic Realism: Problems of Empathic Field Observation in a Sectarian Context*

Thomas Robbins; Dick Anthony; Thomas E. Curtis


Political Psychology | 1980

The Limits of "Coercive Persuasion" as an Explanation for Conversion to Authoritarian Sects

Thomas Robbins; Dick Anthony


Archive | 2008

Conversion and “Brainwashing” in New Religious Movements

Dick Anthony; Thomas Robbins

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Thomas E. Curtis

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Madeline Doucas

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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