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Is there a word for following a man or his ideas too closely?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowAlternatives to “hypocrite”Is there a word for someone with the same name?Word for “nuance” of movementWord for “Source of Unpleasant Disclosure”Word for flaws associated with an overly rule-based cognitive styleDescribe someone who doesn't want anything better to happen to anyone elseWord to describe someone who plays 'devil's advocate'Is there a word for the class of words used to describe relationships between people?Business friendly language name for “sucking-up”What does “the poet” do?










1















Imagine a famous person who delivers dogma that other people follow too closely. A follower might study and take as the whole truth everything he says or references. The follower might obsess and second guess his own independent thoughts in favor of this other person he trusts more than himself. Is there an english word to describe the action of being blind to independent thought and handing over the reigns to another persons ideas?



I am trying to succinctly describe the importance of NOT doing that thing. So a word(s) that would make sense in the blank would be the ultimate goal.




"Its important to not ___________ [pledge allegiance to] another man
or his ideas"




Pledging allegiance is the best I could come up with, perhaps there is another word to describe the person or specific action I am looking for.










share|improve this question
























  • From the title: tailgating... ;-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 20:43







  • 1





    How about fanatism?

    – Gustavson
    Mar 21 at 20:44











  • 'Idolising' is how I would put it.

    – Nigel J
    Mar 21 at 20:49











  • I like Idolizing! Thank you.

    – IndependentThoughts
    Mar 21 at 21:12






  • 2





    @Gustavson +1 Provided you meant fanaticism... :-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 22:24















1















Imagine a famous person who delivers dogma that other people follow too closely. A follower might study and take as the whole truth everything he says or references. The follower might obsess and second guess his own independent thoughts in favor of this other person he trusts more than himself. Is there an english word to describe the action of being blind to independent thought and handing over the reigns to another persons ideas?



I am trying to succinctly describe the importance of NOT doing that thing. So a word(s) that would make sense in the blank would be the ultimate goal.




"Its important to not ___________ [pledge allegiance to] another man
or his ideas"




Pledging allegiance is the best I could come up with, perhaps there is another word to describe the person or specific action I am looking for.










share|improve this question
























  • From the title: tailgating... ;-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 20:43







  • 1





    How about fanatism?

    – Gustavson
    Mar 21 at 20:44











  • 'Idolising' is how I would put it.

    – Nigel J
    Mar 21 at 20:49











  • I like Idolizing! Thank you.

    – IndependentThoughts
    Mar 21 at 21:12






  • 2





    @Gustavson +1 Provided you meant fanaticism... :-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 22:24













1












1








1








Imagine a famous person who delivers dogma that other people follow too closely. A follower might study and take as the whole truth everything he says or references. The follower might obsess and second guess his own independent thoughts in favor of this other person he trusts more than himself. Is there an english word to describe the action of being blind to independent thought and handing over the reigns to another persons ideas?



I am trying to succinctly describe the importance of NOT doing that thing. So a word(s) that would make sense in the blank would be the ultimate goal.




"Its important to not ___________ [pledge allegiance to] another man
or his ideas"




Pledging allegiance is the best I could come up with, perhaps there is another word to describe the person or specific action I am looking for.










share|improve this question
















Imagine a famous person who delivers dogma that other people follow too closely. A follower might study and take as the whole truth everything he says or references. The follower might obsess and second guess his own independent thoughts in favor of this other person he trusts more than himself. Is there an english word to describe the action of being blind to independent thought and handing over the reigns to another persons ideas?



I am trying to succinctly describe the importance of NOT doing that thing. So a word(s) that would make sense in the blank would be the ultimate goal.




"Its important to not ___________ [pledge allegiance to] another man
or his ideas"




Pledging allegiance is the best I could come up with, perhaps there is another word to describe the person or specific action I am looking for.







single-word-requests verbs






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 22 at 10:12









alwayslearning

26.5k63894




26.5k63894










asked Mar 21 at 20:39









IndependentThoughtsIndependentThoughts

61




61












  • From the title: tailgating... ;-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 20:43







  • 1





    How about fanatism?

    – Gustavson
    Mar 21 at 20:44











  • 'Idolising' is how I would put it.

    – Nigel J
    Mar 21 at 20:49











  • I like Idolizing! Thank you.

    – IndependentThoughts
    Mar 21 at 21:12






  • 2





    @Gustavson +1 Provided you meant fanaticism... :-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 22:24

















  • From the title: tailgating... ;-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 20:43







  • 1





    How about fanatism?

    – Gustavson
    Mar 21 at 20:44











  • 'Idolising' is how I would put it.

    – Nigel J
    Mar 21 at 20:49











  • I like Idolizing! Thank you.

    – IndependentThoughts
    Mar 21 at 21:12






  • 2





    @Gustavson +1 Provided you meant fanaticism... :-)

    – Jim
    Mar 21 at 22:24
















From the title: tailgating... ;-)

– Jim
Mar 21 at 20:43






From the title: tailgating... ;-)

– Jim
Mar 21 at 20:43





1




1





How about fanatism?

– Gustavson
Mar 21 at 20:44





How about fanatism?

– Gustavson
Mar 21 at 20:44













'Idolising' is how I would put it.

– Nigel J
Mar 21 at 20:49





'Idolising' is how I would put it.

– Nigel J
Mar 21 at 20:49













I like Idolizing! Thank you.

– IndependentThoughts
Mar 21 at 21:12





I like Idolizing! Thank you.

– IndependentThoughts
Mar 21 at 21:12




2




2





@Gustavson +1 Provided you meant fanaticism... :-)

– Jim
Mar 21 at 22:24





@Gustavson +1 Provided you meant fanaticism... :-)

– Jim
Mar 21 at 22:24










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














That word is ape (implying imitate blindly).




"Its important to not ape another man or his ideas"




ODO:




imitate
VERB [WITH OBJECT]

Imitate (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.



‘The guy's just aping his mentors, ill-equipped to blaze his own
path.’

‘Incidentally, the kids are only aping the behaviour they
witness in real life.’







share|improve this answer






























    -1














    I would probably pick terms referring to religious fervor such as:



    Proselytize:




    intransitive verb



    1 : to induce someone to convert to one's faith 2 :
    to recruit someone to join one's party, institution, or cause



    transitive verb



    : to recruit or convert especially to a new faith,
    institution, or cause




    Of course, the above term refers to the actions of your "famous person" relative to his followers. The followers might be referred to as disciples. If you look up "disciple" in a thesaurus you will find several terms for the followers, and they may give you a hint for other terms to use.






    share|improve this answer























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      0














      That word is ape (implying imitate blindly).




      "Its important to not ape another man or his ideas"




      ODO:




      imitate
      VERB [WITH OBJECT]

      Imitate (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.



      ‘The guy's just aping his mentors, ill-equipped to blaze his own
      path.’

      ‘Incidentally, the kids are only aping the behaviour they
      witness in real life.’







      share|improve this answer



























        0














        That word is ape (implying imitate blindly).




        "Its important to not ape another man or his ideas"




        ODO:




        imitate
        VERB [WITH OBJECT]

        Imitate (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.



        ‘The guy's just aping his mentors, ill-equipped to blaze his own
        path.’

        ‘Incidentally, the kids are only aping the behaviour they
        witness in real life.’







        share|improve this answer

























          0












          0








          0







          That word is ape (implying imitate blindly).




          "Its important to not ape another man or his ideas"




          ODO:




          imitate
          VERB [WITH OBJECT]

          Imitate (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.



          ‘The guy's just aping his mentors, ill-equipped to blaze his own
          path.’

          ‘Incidentally, the kids are only aping the behaviour they
          witness in real life.’







          share|improve this answer













          That word is ape (implying imitate blindly).




          "Its important to not ape another man or his ideas"




          ODO:




          imitate
          VERB [WITH OBJECT]

          Imitate (someone or something), especially in an absurd or unthinking way.



          ‘The guy's just aping his mentors, ill-equipped to blaze his own
          path.’

          ‘Incidentally, the kids are only aping the behaviour they
          witness in real life.’








          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Mar 22 at 10:07









          alwayslearningalwayslearning

          26.5k63894




          26.5k63894























              -1














              I would probably pick terms referring to religious fervor such as:



              Proselytize:




              intransitive verb



              1 : to induce someone to convert to one's faith 2 :
              to recruit someone to join one's party, institution, or cause



              transitive verb



              : to recruit or convert especially to a new faith,
              institution, or cause




              Of course, the above term refers to the actions of your "famous person" relative to his followers. The followers might be referred to as disciples. If you look up "disciple" in a thesaurus you will find several terms for the followers, and they may give you a hint for other terms to use.






              share|improve this answer



























                -1














                I would probably pick terms referring to religious fervor such as:



                Proselytize:




                intransitive verb



                1 : to induce someone to convert to one's faith 2 :
                to recruit someone to join one's party, institution, or cause



                transitive verb



                : to recruit or convert especially to a new faith,
                institution, or cause




                Of course, the above term refers to the actions of your "famous person" relative to his followers. The followers might be referred to as disciples. If you look up "disciple" in a thesaurus you will find several terms for the followers, and they may give you a hint for other terms to use.






                share|improve this answer

























                  -1












                  -1








                  -1







                  I would probably pick terms referring to religious fervor such as:



                  Proselytize:




                  intransitive verb



                  1 : to induce someone to convert to one's faith 2 :
                  to recruit someone to join one's party, institution, or cause



                  transitive verb



                  : to recruit or convert especially to a new faith,
                  institution, or cause




                  Of course, the above term refers to the actions of your "famous person" relative to his followers. The followers might be referred to as disciples. If you look up "disciple" in a thesaurus you will find several terms for the followers, and they may give you a hint for other terms to use.






                  share|improve this answer













                  I would probably pick terms referring to religious fervor such as:



                  Proselytize:




                  intransitive verb



                  1 : to induce someone to convert to one's faith 2 :
                  to recruit someone to join one's party, institution, or cause



                  transitive verb



                  : to recruit or convert especially to a new faith,
                  institution, or cause




                  Of course, the above term refers to the actions of your "famous person" relative to his followers. The followers might be referred to as disciples. If you look up "disciple" in a thesaurus you will find several terms for the followers, and they may give you a hint for other terms to use.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Mar 22 at 1:20









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