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Ideopathologization

The social and discursive process by which certain ideologies, beliefs, or worldviews are labeled as pathologicalmentally ill, delusional, or irrational—while others are treated as normal or healthy. Ideopathologization is a power move: it uses the authority of psychology and psychiatry to delegitimize opposing views without engaging their substance. It often targets religious, spiritual, or non-materialist beliefs, framing them as symptoms of mental disorder. The concept reveals that the line between "reasonable" and "crazy" is not purely medical but ideological, shaped by cultural norms and institutional power.
Example: "The atheist forum's constant diagnosis of believers as 'delusional' and 'in need of therapy' was a clear case of ideopathologization—using clinical language to silence religious difference."

Ideopathology

A critical concept describing the dysfunctional or harmful manifestations of ideology—when ideological commitment becomes rigid, dogmatic, or disconnected from reality. Ideopathology includes symptoms like the inability to process contradictory evidence, the compulsion to convert others, the projection of evil onto out-groups, and the sacrifice of ethical principles for ideological purity. It treats ideologies not as neutral systems of belief but as potential vectors of cognitive and social pathology. The term is used to analyze how ideologies can become self-destructive or oppressive without requiring that all ideology is pathological.

Example: "His ideopathology was evident when he defended a corrupt politician simply because they shared a party label—loyalty had completely replaced judgment."
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