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A Psychology of Ideology: Unpacking the Psychological Structure of Ideological Thinking.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

The psychological study of ideology has traditionally emphasized the content of ideological beliefs, guided by questions about what people believe, such as why people believe in omniscient gods or fascist worldviews. This theoretical focus has led to siloed subdisciplines separately dealing with political, religious, moral, and prejudiced attitudes. The fractionation has fostered a neglect of the cognitive structure of ideological worldviews and associated questions about why ideologies-in all their forms-are so compelling to the human mind. Here I argue that it is essential to consider the nature of ideological cognition across a multitude of ideologies. I offer a multidimensional, empirically tractable framework of ideological thinking, suggesting it can be conceptualized as a style of thinking that is rigid in its adherence to a doctrine and resistance to evidence-based belief-updating and favorably oriented toward an in-group and antagonistic to out-groups. The article identifies the subcomponents of ideological thinking and highlights that ideological thinking constitutes a meaningful psychological phenomenon that merits direct scholarly investigation and analysis. By emphasizing conceptual precision, methodological directions, and interdisciplinary integration across the political and cognitive sciences, the article illustrates the potential of this framework as a catalyst for developing a rigorous domain-general psychology of ideology.

Description

Funder: Gates Cambridge Trust; FundRef: https://doi.org/10.13039/501100005370

Journal Title

Perspect Psychol Sci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1745-6916
1745-6924

Volume Title

17

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/