Sunday, August 31, 2008

Scientology -- Is This a Religion?

Stephen A. Kent Ph.D. researches new and alternative religions, combining perspectives from sociology with religious studies.

Scientology -- Is This a Religion?
In this article by professor Kent explores the many aspects of the Church of Scientology, making many insightful observations about its structure and behavior.

Although some social scientists insist that Scientology is a religion, the more appropriate position to take is that the organization is a multi-faceted transnational that has religion as only one of its many components. Other components include political aspirations, business ventures, cultural productions, pseudo-medical practices, pseudo-psychiatric claims, and (among its most devoted members who have joined the Sea Organization), an alternative family structure. Sea Organization's job demands appear to allow little time for quality child rearing. Most disturbing, however, about Sea Organization life is that members can be subject to extremely severe and intrusive punishments through security checks, internal hearings called "Committees of Evidence," and a forced labor and re-indoctrination program known as the Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF) and its harshest companion, the RPF's RPF. Taken together, these harsh and intrusive punishments likely violate a number of human rights clauses as outlined by two United Nations statements.

You can read the entire article online -- Here --.

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