It only confuses you, no one else.
Of course. I'm the only person you're trying to convince.
But seriously, I should remind you that you have the burden of proving that ideology causes changes in behavior; namely, violence. If your arguments are confusing (disorderly, unstable, cryptic, ambiguous, etc.), then you have not met your burden of proof.
People who interpret language normally and not with an extreme literalism that completely ignores context and linguistic convention understand that saying "[Mao's] ideology influenced..." or "Maoism influenced..." also implies "Mao influenced...".
I'd recommend you state your premise: "Mao used his ideology to influence people." It's a clear, complete sentence that is unambiguous and spells out the relationship between Mao and his ideology.
It is actually more accurate, because Mao was not directly influencing these people, it was his ideology being spread by the media and other people that was influencing people.
Again, it would be very helpful to explain using an example exactly how Mao's ideology influenced people rather than how Mao influenced people. Distinguishing the role Mao played and the role his ideology played is important because we need to make sure that it was ideology rather than Mao that had causal power over some of the Chinese people. If we cannot separate the two, then we don't know what (or who) caused what.
Let me illustrate: Wang Hung Cho was a happily married family man living in China. He was healthy, physically fit, had no criminal record and was never diagnosed with any mental illness. He had heard of Mao, of course, but never paid much attention to him. One day Wang happened to see a book in a store about Mao's ideology. Wang read the book and quickly changed into a violent revolutionary for Mao telling his family and friends how Mao's ideology caused him to see that he should use violence against those who do not support communism in China.
You have just described yourself as being influenced by beliefs and values. Why did you feel guilty? What did you think critically about?
I began to feel guilty because I was pressured by other people to have faith in God and pray. Their advising me that I could solve some of my problems that way became for me a hoped-for solution to my problems.
That multiple actors may influence people doesn't negate the fact that beliefs and values are among these factors.
That's correct, but to know if ideology influences people we need to rule out other possible causes of behavior.
Thanks for the discussion, but we'll never get anywhere as you keep reverting to the same errors I've pointed out a dozen times or more.
I was hoping that you could offer the reasoning and evidence I was looking for, but it looks like you're opting out. I'm left wondering if you've convinced other people how ideology presumably causes violence.
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