Beth
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,598
Okay, now you are being realistic. It is abusive for someone in authority to lie to their charges. It is more abusive to hold those lies up as truth while you systematically tell them that the truth is a lie.
Okay. So you are saying the reason that parents teaching their children their religion is abusive even when the 'victims' don't perceive it as abuse is because it’s a lie. This is a pretty weak argument for advocating making parents teaching religion to their children illegal. Further, when you move away from the fundamentalist, literal interpretations of their holy book, it’s pretty hard to make the case that the parents are lying to their children because they aren't making claims that can be falsified.
Now, I said I would in return provide some reasons why incest can be considered abusive even if the victim doesn’t perceive it that way. So here are three excerpts from abstracts on the issue of the effects of childhood sexual abuse:
From the abstract for “The Relationships between Childhood Sexual Abuse, Social Anxiety, and Symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Women” by Feerick, Margaret M.; Snow, Kyle L. with National Instit Child Health & Human Development, National Instit Health, Bethesda, MD published in Journal of Family Violence, vol. 20, no. 6, pp. 409-419, Dec 2005:
Women with a history of sexual abuse reported more symptoms of anxiety, distress in social situations, & posttraumatic stress disorder than other women. Women who experienced attempted or actual intercourse reported more avoidance than women with no history of abuse & women with exposure only, & more PTSD symptoms than all other groups of women. Women who experienced fondling reported more PTSD symptoms than women with no history of abuse.
From the abstract for “Shame, Humiliation, and Childhood Sexual Abuse: Distinct Contributions and Emotional Coherence” by Negrao, Claudio II; Bonanno, George A.; Noll, Jennie G.; Putnam, Frank W.; Trickett, Penelope K. with Hispanic Counseling Center, New Britain General Hospital, CT published Child Maltreatment, vol. 10, no. 4, pp. 350-363, Nov 2005
Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) may produce powerful & enduring emotion reactions, including intense shame, anger, & humiliation. Whereas shame & anger have received considerable interest from researchers, less attention has been paid to humiliation or associated coherence among these emotions as it relates to the psychological adjustment in CSA survivors. In the current investigation, the authors coded shame, anger, & humiliation from narrative transcripts of CSA survivors as they either voluntarily disclosed an abuse experience or described a distressing nonabuse experience & from nonabused individuals as they described a distressing experience. Verbal humiliation was found to be significantly associated with nonverbal displays of shame. Coherence between verbal humiliation & facial shame among CSA nondisclosers was associated with increased symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
From the abstract for “The Developmental Consequences of the Maltreatment of Girls” by Smith, Carolyn A. ; Ireland, Timothy O. with School Social Welfare, U Albany published in Criminologie, vol. 38, no. 1, pp. 67-102, spring 200:
We find that experiencing substantiated maltreatment increases the risk of most outcomes at the bivariate level. Employing logistic regression, maltreatment increases the odds of several negative consequences after controlling for confounding sociodemographic variables including poverty, family structure, parental education, race/ethnicity, & adolescent delinquency. Results also suggest that sex abuse may be particularly problematic for these young women in emerging adulthood.
I’m only quoting 3, but there is a plethora of well documented adverse outcomes as a result of childhood sexual abuse and hundreds, if not thousands of peer-reviewed articles describing the abuse, the effects, and the best ways to treat people for it.
Incest is illegal in all 50 states and a parent who sexually abuses their child can be charged with a crime and lose custody of that child. Now, you’re suggesting we attempt a similar approach for dealing with parents who lie to their children without any of the rigorous scientific work needed to provide the supporting evidence that lying to children causes the same level of problems that sexual abuse does.
You haven't made a very convincing argument in my opinion. Where are the studies that show how often a religious upbringing results in adverse outcomes? What adverse outcomes can be expected? How severe are they? You have provided no evidence of damage from the teaching of religious beliefs beyond a single anecdote (and that only implies a correlation at best) and the argument that when teaching religion to children, they are being taught lies as if that automatically constituted abuse.
No. I have claimed that the harm they may suffer from being taught religious beliefs is not sufficient to be called abusive and is not justification for governmental attempts to prevent it. I consider the solution to be significantly worse than the problem in this case.Now, you and others have claimed that children will eventually learn the truth and be none the worse for wear.
Yes. In my opinion a lie is a deliberate deception by the speaker.You have also claimed that the people spreading the lies aren't really lying because they believe it is the truth.
Yes, those statements do but you were incorrect about my position regarding the first statement. There is no contradiction in what I was actually saying.These two statements contradict each other. If the adults teaching the lies can't tell they are lies, how do you expect children to?