Differences between revisions 8 and 9
Revision 8 as of 2025-03-17 05:00:06
Size: 3680
Comment:
Revision 9 as of 2025-03-17 05:12:22
Size: 3911
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 41: Line 41:
  .delusional thinking, magical thinking, [[ | schizotypy]], and hallucination proneness predict conspiracy beliefs   .delusional thinking, magical thinking, [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schizotypy |schizotypy]], and hallucination proneness predict conspiracy beliefs
Line 43: Line 43:
 .p71 [[ https://loop.frontiersin.org/people/38621/overview | Neil Dagnall ]] [[ attachment:fpsyg-06-00206.pdf | Conspiracy Theory and Cognitive Style: a Worldview ]] Journal of Parapsychology
Line 53: Line 54:
  • UscinskiConspiracy

Conspiracy Theories : a primer

Joseph E. Uschinski 2020 Tigard 001.9 USC


  • p01 Ch 1 Why Study Conspiracy Theories?



  • p21 Ch 2 What Is a Conspiracy Theory?



  • p47 Ch 3 The Popularity of Conspiracy and Anomalous Beliers



  • p65 The Psychology and Sociology of Conspiracy Theories


  • p67 conjunction fallacy -> conspiracy theories and paranormal phenomena

  • p67 Some strongly need cognitive closure, intolerant of uncertainty

  • p67 Addicted to answers: Need for cognitive closure and the endorsement of conspiracy beliefs 2017 pdf

  • p67 overactive cheater detectors, heavy debt + large insurance policy + house fire = suggests arson

  • p67 death of Supreme Court conservative Antonin Scalia 2016. Obama conspiracy? or overweight 79yo smoker with diabetes and heart problems?
  • p69 Cass Sunstein: conspiracy theories stem from crippled epistemologies

  • p69 Walter Lippmann: People look to the news the way a drunk looks to a lamppost -- not for illumination, bur rather for reinforcement. "oft quoted" no cite, cannot find

  • p69 Political arguments end in stalemate; unreasoned opinions cannot be altered with reason and evidence
  • p69 motivated reasoning dismisses challenging information
  • p69 People with less capacity for analytical thinking tend to believe conspiracy theories
  • p70 four styles of personality traits: secure, anxious, avoidant, and fearful
    • anxious, avoidant, need for uniqueness, narcissism predict belief in conspiracy theories
    • delusional thinking, magical thinking, schizotypy, and hallucination proneness predict conspiracy beliefs

  • p71 Paranormal ideation supernatural ideation
  • p71 Neil Dagnall Conspiracy Theory and Cognitive Style: a Worldview Journal of Parapsychology


  • p79 The Politics of Conspiracy Theories



  • p109 President Trump, the Internet, Conspiracy, and Conspiracy Theory


  • p125 Conclusion

UscinskiConspiracy (last edited 2025-03-17 11:19:21 by KeithLofstrom)