Even small cults are a serious cost on the world economy, to victims, their families, employers, friends, and credit-card companies.
Keith HensonThe rare person is still interested in new advances when they are adults. There is possibly a correlation with intelligence. In any case, you have to be fairly bright to keep learning and changing attitudes as you get older.
Keith HensonTrying to control information in the network age is about as successful as pissing into the wind.
Keith HensonFighting hard to protect yourself and your relatives is good for your genes, but when captured and escape is not possible, giving up short of dying and making the best you can of the new situation is also good for your genes.
Keith HensonScn is like HIV. Gets in there and screws up the immune system, perverts the law to its own ends. Forget government taking the lead role in bringing down scn, that task falls to you and me.
Keith HensonCults, or related social movements such as the Taliban in Afghanistan, result in massive military expenses.
Keith HensonCould people be trained to be less gullible? Or are you as stuck with gullibility as you are with skin colour?
Keith HensonAs for leadership, I am the kind who leads reluctantly and more by example than anything else. Someone had to be on the incorporation papers as president.
Keith HensonSome people recovering from drugs or alcohol stay with the programs indefinitely, making the recovery program their family, a long-term source of attention rewards.
Keith HensonCult recruiting methods based on dosing victims with the brain chemicals released during capture bonding would make cults even more of a problem than they are now.
Keith HensonPeople can undergo a sudden change of thinking and loyalties under threat of death or intense social pressure and isolation from friends and family.
Keith HensonPrimates will continue to play social games without the least insight into what is killing them.
Keith HensonPeople under the influence of cults is similar to that we observe in addicts. Typical behaviour for both includes draining bank accounts, neglecting children, destroying relations with family and losing interest in anything except the drug or cult.
Keith HensonAction leads to Attention. that in the short-term releases Rewarding brain chemicals and in the long term improves reproductive success.
Keith HensonSuccessful cult memes induce intense social interaction behaviour between cult members. This trips the attention detectors.
Keith HensonChildren do not have to learn that streets are dangerous places by potentially fatal trial and error.
Keith HensonPerhaps teachers should be instructed in a program where they lie to their students on a regular basis to sharpen up their skills at detecting lies.
Keith HensonIf anyone wonders why the airlines are not doing well it is because flying has been made such an unpleasant and degrading experience.
Keith HensonGenetic studies in Iceland have found that many of the women who were the founding stock of Iceland came from England and what is now France. Some were probably captured and carried off in Viking raids only 40 generations ago.
Keith HensonPeople repeat behaviour that leads to flooding their brains with pleasurable chemicals. The short-term reward loop acts over hours to years, and the long-term reproductive success loop over generations.
Keith HensonEvolution acts slowly. Our psychological characteristics today are those that promoted reproductive success in the ancestral environmen.
Keith HensonThe information that is passed from person to person and from generation to generation is the primary factor that gives humans a competitive advantage over other animals.
Keith HensonAttention is the way social primates measure status. It is highly rewarding because it causes the release of brain chemicals such as dopamine and endorphins.
Keith HensonAnyone who has ever had the feeling of being higher than a kite after giving a public speech is well aware of the effects of attention.
Keith HensonLie detection is like language; there is a learning window. Telling whoppers to small children seems to be a family tradition in many families.
Keith Henson