The gist of the your excerpt is that Hyde or any entity engaged in group-mediated behavior can succeed at no psychological cost. There must be a balance between ego regression and ego control.
The excerpt does
not imply that there is no cost, although I will concede that the excerpt I chose (due to its reference to the state of falling in love) is considerably less emphatic about that point than the rest of the article. If you go back to the link and read the article, you will see what I mean. If you prefer a pdf download, there is a link in the "Burnside's piece on Mr. W" thread, which I believe is still about half way down the first page of topics in the Hyde Index. The link is somewhere on page 2 of that thread. Incidentally, the Mr. W incident is a prescient case in point as well. You might want to read that whole thread (only 2 pages, less than 20 posts).
As for your objections:
"You are dealing with adolescents (self concept still not fully formed)"
I don't think teens are at a higher risk. Ego regression can be a danger to adults as well as teens. The ego of an adult can regress to that of an adolescent, and beyond. We see this in cults.
I disagree with your contention re. risk. Empirical evidence from Hyde School "graduates" on its own should be sufficient to prove that. And it has been my own personal experience that this is a very bad situation. And there are numerous articles on adolescent psychology and the effects of thought coercion and behavior modification on adults, let alone teenagers, that attest to that as well. Good point re. cults!
"You are dealing with a long-term residential habitat (no reality checks)"
It is reasonable to assume that reality checks can be implemented at Hyde, just as they are at other boarding schools.
Hyde's perception of reality is not the same as the rest of society's, and certainly not like that of other boarding schools. If the Catholic Church still can not adequately police their own, what makes you think that Hyde can fare any better? Don't get me started on that nemesis this particular thread is named after...
"You are dealing with a megalomaniac who wants to make money off of you ('nuff said)"
So they'll have to lose you know who.
And what do you think the well-groomed progeny are for?
I'm unqualified to judge here; I'm just working with the given materials. But as I understand your article, character education is not beyond the realm of possibility.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, particularly when they have put as much work into articulating it as you obviously have. However, given the current trends in education, not to mention society as a whole, I find the term "character education" a cliche'ed oxymoron at best. At its less than best, it's a catchy misnomer dressing up atavistic and control-oriented behavior modification programs that use thought coercion to do the job that a smack on the hands with a ruler by a nun used to do. At least it was clear what the smack, in fact,
was. Behavior mod is less obvious, and has the potential to do some real and long-lasting psychological damage because it fucks with your
mind, not with your knuckles.
Sorry if I seem a bit strident about this, but such is my lot! ::seg:: ::seg:: ::seg::
What is your history or interest in all this?