"Cultic" certainly connotates something of lesser degree and threat than does the term “cult,” but as our experience with the terminology concerning the modern concept has grown, the terms have become interchagable. Much also depends on the orientation of the person or organization making the declaration. We now have (validated, statistically solid) tools and inventories for evaluating former cult members that were not available even ten years ago in addition to the information from the field of neurophysiology and brain imaging to aid in the determination of these things.
It is a more exact science, validated by empirical data, and not just soley determined by someone’s very subjective evaluation. It is also no longer governed by avoidance of negative and emotional connotation but has become more understandable. Our understanding of and successes in the treatment of
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD),
battered wife syndrome and the
Stanford Prison Experiment has greatly contributed to our understanding of cults. Since the TM craze and the days of the
People Temple/Jones, we have all the subsequent groups and their histories, some of which have spanned decades. Take for instance the
Applewhite group/Heavens Gate cult. The surviviors have provided a twenty-year historical account of the development and decline of the group. The extensive study of the
Boston Movement of the International Church of Christ is enlightenting as well.
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