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Brainwashing

Brainwashing, also known as coercive persuasion or mind control, is a controversial concept that refers to a process in which a person's beliefs, attitudes, or behaviors are forcibly altered through psychological manipulation, deception, or indoctrination. The term is often associated with totalitarian regimes, cults, and other groups that employ systematic methods to influence individuals' thoughts and actions against their will. The Hebrew translation for brainwashing is שטיפת מוח (sh'tifat moach). In other languages, it is known as lavado de cerebro in Spanish, lavage de cerveau in French, and Gehirnwäsche in German. The concept gained prominence during the Korean War, when Chinese and North Korean forces were accused of using techniques to induce false confessions and ideological conversion among captured soldiers. While the existence and effectiveness of brainwashing have been debated among psychologists and scholars, the term remains a powerful metaphor for the manipulation of human thought and behavior.

Wikipedia Information
Brainwashing
Systematic coercive persuasion
Brainwashing
Brainwashing is the systematic effort to get someone to adopt a particular deception, loyalty, instruction, or doctrine without their will or awareness. Brainwashing is also a colloquial term that refers in general to psychological techniques that manipulate action or thought against a person's will, desire, or knowledge. It attempts to damage individual or group attitudes, frames of reference, beliefs, values or loyalties by demonstrating that current thinking patterns and attitudes are wrong and need change. Brainwashing is said to reduce its subject's ability to think critically or independently, to allow the introduction of new, unwanted thoughts and ideas into their minds.
Last modified: 2025-11-18T02:12:42ZView full article on Wikipedia