that's a whole mess of uninformed/cherry picking/moving the goalposts bunk.
What goalposts were moved - where were they before, and where do you think they are now?
How are dictionaries "uninformed"?
How is copying
every top dictionary hit "cherry picking"?
If it really was cherry picking, then why didn't you just immediately respond with definitions,
of the word in the same context, that counter the ones that I've provided?
the point is whether patriotism, Catholicism, islamic schools, the "Church of Woke", or any morality/ideals we teach to our children (like bullying is bad, stealing is bad, etc etc) they are all the same types of "brainwashing"
No it wasn't. It's not me moving the goalposts, it's either you or
@tobigtofool [sic] - I was explicitly responding to his point:
tobigtofool said:
Because believing in [religion] is tantamount to believing in any conspiracy theory.
--
https://www.metabunk.org/threads/discussion-of-metabunks-politeness-policy.13249/post-307290
..if one wants to water down the definitions of brainwashing by saying:
It's fine if you disagree, but that would make you wrong.
I'm prepared to alter my word usage to "indoctrination" if you're prepared to agree on that. "Brainwashing" does have a "scare factor" that might put you off its use, but it's certainly a term of the art. E.g. the title of this:
``"Stop Brainwashing children!" Richard Dawkins on religion, biology and America''
Source: https://youtu.be/watch?v=SmSJD3igd4Q
in which explicitly uses the term in only his second sentence (75s), even though he also falls back onto "indoctrinated" almost immediately afterwards (138s), as does the interviewer (228s). I consider "indoctrination" to be self-evident that it's barely worth discussing - there's inculcation of a doctrine, so it's indoctrination.
I still believe it's brainwashing too - the school indoctrinators just start with a more
rasa[*]
tabula onto which to perform their inculcation - but we can agree to disagree over that usage, and I happily and politely consider you as wrong on this point as you happily and politely consider me.
[* Incidentally, I know etymology isn't definition, but a lot of people consider "
tabula rasa" to have meant "
blank slate", but it didn't - it more precisely meant "
blanked slate", scrubbed clean of what was there before - it's the passive perfect participle ot
rado, radere, to scrape, used when the subject (in this case the feminine singular
tabula) has had the action of scrubbing done to it. So the slate version of "washing" was involved to reach that state, the state now used to describe the childlike mind. Of course, Locke was using the term as merely an analogy - it is as clean as it would be had it been (=passive) washed (=perfect participle), so the definition's actually irrelevant, hence this paragraph being entirely a footnote, in case some are interested in the origins of the terms that are in common use.]