menticide
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
From Latin mens (“mind”) or mentalis (“mental”) + -cīda (“killer”), by analogy to homicide, genocide, etc. Coined during the 1950s.
Noun
    
menticide (countable and uncountable, plural menticides)
- Brain-washing, conditioning people to abandon their beliefs.
-  1957, Joost Abraham Maurits Meerloo, Mental Seduction and Menticide: The Psychology of Thought Control and Brainwashing, London: Jonathan Cape, →OCLC, page 87:- In the last phases of brainwashing and menticide, the self-humiliating submission of the victims serves as an inner defensive device annihilating the prosecuting inquisitor in a magic way.
 
 
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- Efforts to destroy the mind or the will of an individual or group of people.
-  1974, Herbert Foster, Ribbin', Jivin', and Playin' the Dozens: The Unrecognized Dilemma of Inner-city Schools, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ballinger, →ISBN, page 6:- In response, black groups accuse school personnel of practicing genocide and "menticide" (miseducation) for allowing black children to get away with conduct they would not condone in white children.
 
-  1989, Fielding McGehee; Rebecca Moore, The Need for a Second Look at Jonestown: Remembering its People, Lewiston, NY: E. Mellen Press, →ISBN, page 151:- I wanted then — and I want today — no laws against "mental kidnapping" or "mentacide" or any other socially unacceptable state of mind.
 
 
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Derived terms
    
- menticidal
- menticidally
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