How (Ir)rational Is it to Believe in Contradictory Conspiracy Theories?

Abstract: There is evidence that not only believing in one conspiracy theory (CT) makes a person more probable to believe in others, however unrelated their content is, but that people can even believe in contradictory CTs about a single event. After piloting locally relevant conspiracy theories on a convenient Serbian speaking sample (N = 152), we sought to replicate this finding on a larger sample (N = 252), but introduced several changes. We differentiated necessarily and probably mutually exclusive CTs, and interviewed the participants who answered contradictory to understand the reasoning behind it. The participants were more prone to endorse probably than necessarily exclusive items (we registered positive correlations in former and no correlation or negative correlation in later). Two strategies enabled them to overcome the contradiction: (a) distilling the crucial content and downplaying other information and (b) treating the contradictory scenarios as possible versions of events. Ta.... https://ejop.psychopen.eu/index.php/ejop/article/view/1690

Standort
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Umfang
Online-Ressource
Sprache
Englisch

Erschienen in
How (Ir)rational Is it to Believe in Contradictory Conspiracy Theories? ; volume:15 ; number:1 ; day:28 ; month:02 ; year:2019
Europe's journal of psychology ; 15, Heft 1 (28.02.2019)

Urheber
Petar Lukić
Iris Žeželj
Biljana Stanković

DOI
10.5964/ejop.v15i1.1690
URN
urn:nbn:de:101:1-2020101416512841371604
Rechteinformation
Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Letzte Aktualisierung
14.08.2025, 10:57 MESZ

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Beteiligte

  • Petar Lukić
  • Iris Žeželj
  • Biljana Stanković

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