Franks Bradley, Bangerter Adrian, Bauer Martin W, Hall Matthew, Noort Mark C
Department of Psychological and Behavioural Science, London School of Economics and Political ScienceLondon, United Kingdom.
Institut de Psychologie du Travail et des Organisations, Université de NeuchâtelNeuchâtel, Switzerland.
Front Psychol. 2017 Jun 20;8:861. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00861. eCollection 2017.
Conspiracy theories (CTs) are widespread ways by which people make sense of unsettling or disturbing cultural events. Belief in CTs is often connected to problematic consequences, such as decreased engagement with conventional political action or even political extremism, so understanding the psychological and social qualities of CT belief is important. CTs have often been understood to be "monological," displaying the tendency for belief in one conspiracy theory to be correlated with belief in (many) others. Explanations of monologicality invoke a nomothetical or "closed" mindset whereby mutually supporting beliefs based on mistrust of official explanations are used to interpret public events as conspiracies, independent of the facts about those events (which they may ignore or deny). But research on monologicality offers little discussion of the content of monological beliefs and reasoning from the standpoint of the CT believers. This is due in part to the "access problem": CT believers are averse to being researched because they often distrust researchers and what they appear to represent. Using several strategies to address the access problem we were able to engage CT believers in semi-structured interviews, combining their results with analysis of media documents and field observations to reconstruct a conspiracy worldview - a set of symbolic resources drawn on by CT believers about important dimensions of ontology, epistemology, and human agency. The worldview is structured around six main dimensions: the nature of reality, the self, the outgroup, the ingroup, relevant social and political action, and possible future change. We also describe an ascending typology of five types of CT believers, which vary according to their positions on each of these dimensions. Our findings converge with prior explorations of CT beliefs but also revealed novel aspects: A sense of community among CT believers, a highly differentiated representation of the outgroup, a personal journey of conversion, variegated kinds of political action, and optimistic belief in future change. These findings are at odds with the typical image of monological CT believers as paranoid, cynical, anomic and irrational. For many, the CT worldview may rather constitute the ideological underpinning of a nascent pre-figurative social movement.
阴谋论是人们理解令人不安或困扰的文化事件的普遍方式。对阴谋论的信仰往往与一些不良后果相关,比如减少对传统政治行动的参与,甚至导致政治极端主义,因此了解阴谋论信仰的心理和社会特质很重要。阴谋论通常被理解为“单一逻辑的”,表现出相信一种阴谋论往往与相信(许多)其他阴谋论相关的倾向。对单一逻辑性的解释援引了一种通则性或“封闭”的思维模式,即基于对官方解释的不信任而相互支持的信念被用来将公共事件解释为阴谋,而不顾及那些事件的事实(他们可能忽视或否认这些事实)。但关于单一逻辑性的研究很少从阴谋论信徒的角度讨论单一逻辑信念和推理的内容。这部分是由于“接触问题”:阴谋论信徒不愿接受研究,因为他们往往不信任研究人员以及研究人员所代表的事物。通过运用几种策略来解决接触问题,我们得以让阴谋论信徒参与半结构化访谈,并将访谈结果与对媒体文件的分析以及实地观察相结合,以重构一种阴谋论世界观——一套阴谋论信徒用于理解本体论、认识论和人类能动性等重要维度的象征性资源。这种世界观围绕六个主要维度构建:现实的本质、自我、外群体、内群体、相关的社会和政治行动以及可能的未来变化。我们还描述了一种分为五类的阴谋论信徒进阶类型学,这些类型在这些维度上的立场各不相同。我们的研究结果与之前对阴谋论信仰的探索一致,但也揭示了一些新的方面:阴谋论信徒之间的社区感、对外群体的高度分化认知、个人的转变历程、多样化的政治行动类型以及对未来变化的乐观信念。这些发现与阴谋论单一逻辑信徒偏执、愤世嫉俗、失范和非理性的典型形象相悖。对许多人来说,阴谋论世界观可能反而构成了一场新兴的预现型社会运动的意识形态基础。