Site icon Fitness Lifetime

Brainwashing: Coercive Persuasion Techniques

Several movies talk about brainwashing, such as those that show how communists in Vietnam brainwashed American soldiers. However, far from the dramatization of these movies, brainwashing is better understood if we call it coercive persuasion, which consists of influencing, and forcing. This type of persuasion is the strongest and most invasive, generally practiced by sects, totalitarian states, terrorist organizations, and kidnappers, among others.

Brainwashing a person, or more correctly, using coercive persuasion, is not easy. To change an individual’s entire belief system, way of thinking, feeling, and acting, several techniques must be used. These coercive persuasion techniques can be divided into four types: environmental techniques, emotional techniques, cognitive techniques, and those that induce dissociative states.

Environmental type techniques

These types of techniques intervene in the subject’s surroundings or environment by controlling or manipulating them. Their purpose is to weaken resistance to facilitate persuasion. Some of the environmental coercive persuasion techniques are listed below:

“Since we are dealing with the superfluous, we resort to mechanisms of propaganda, marketing and persuasion to induce people to consume and make them believe that the superfluous is necessary and a secret source of happiness.”

-Leonardo Boff-

Emotional type techniques

Motivations are emotionally conditioned, so if emotions can be influenced, they will influence motivations and, in turn, behaviors. Below are two emotional coercive persuasion techniques:

Cognitive type techniques

These types of coercive persuasion techniques are mediated by the previous techniques. A physically weakened subject with a feeling of guilt is perfect for carrying out cognitive persuasion. Some of these techniques are described below:

“Men can only deal with each other in two ways: weapons or logic. Force or persuasion. Those who know they cannot win by using logic have always ended up resorting to weapons.”

-Ayn Rand-

Techniques for inducing dissociative states

Dissociation corresponds to trance states that arise from the intensification of an experience. These states lead to momentary loss of consciousness and identity and are more likely in totalitarian environments. In addition, these states of consciousness make adepts more vulnerable, so they can be targeted by limiting their possible options and reducing their ability to evaluate them.

In short, coercive persuasion, also known as brainwashing, consists of manipulating the environment to weaken the subjects. From there, cognitive and emotional persuasion will change their way of thinking and feeling to, finally, lead them to trance states in which it is easier to persuade.


All sources cited were thoroughly reviewed by our team to ensure their quality, reliability, timeliness, and validity. The bibliography of this article was considered reliable and of academic or scientific accuracy.


  • Rodríguez-Carballeira, Á. (1992). The brainwashing. Psychology of coercive persuasion. Barcelona: Editorial Boixareu Universitaria.
Exit mobile version