conspiracy theories;
system justification;
system identity threat;
motivated reasoning;
political ideology;
GROUP IDENTIFICATION;
SELF-UNCERTAINTY;
BELIEF;
JUSTIFICATION;
THINKING;
PERSONALITY;
GOVERNMENT;
COGNITION;
IDEATION;
NEED;
D O I:
10.1002/ejsp.2495
中图分类号:
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号:
04 ;
0402 ;
摘要:
Conspiracy theories (CTs) about government officials and the institutions they represent are widespread, and span the ideological spectrum. In this study, we test hypotheses suggesting that system identity threat, or a perception that society's fundamental, defining values are under siege due to social change, will predict conspiracy thinking. Across two samples (N = 870, N = 2,702), we found that system identity threat is a strong predictor of a general tendency toward conspiracy thinking and endorsement of both ideological and non-ideological CTs, even after accounting for numerous covariates. We also found that the relationship between system-identity threat and conspiracy-theory endorsement is mediated by conspiracy thinking. These results suggest that conspiracy-theory endorsement may be a compensatory reaction to perceptions that society's essential character is changing.