Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning

It has long been understood that political knowledge in the U.S. is very low. For those who care about the quality of American democracy, this is a big problem. In attempting to find a solution, many people often blame education. While increasing civic knowledge is a laudatory goal, increased polit...

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Main Authors: Aaron Dusso, Sheila Suess Kennedy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Midwest Public Affairs Conference 2015-03-01
Series:Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/28
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spelling doaj-0409eac8ae96498497c3f2a279b3bca92020-11-24T23:18:01ZengMidwest Public Affairs ConferenceJournal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs2381-37172015-03-0111597210.20899/jpna.1.1.59-723Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated ReasoningAaron Dusso0Sheila Suess Kennedy1Indiana University Purdue University IndianapolisIndiana University Purdue University IndianapolisIt has long been understood that political knowledge in the U.S. is very low. For those who care about the quality of American democracy, this is a big problem. In attempting to find a solution, many people often blame education. While increasing civic knowledge is a laudatory goal, increased political sophistication does not necessarily turn individuals into good democratic citizens. Research in cognitive and social psychology paints a picture of people as motivated reasoners. Instead of having an open-minded engagement with issues, individuals typically only seek, see, and understand information in a manner that reinforces what they already believe. Here, we examine motivated reasoning and argue that the strongest partisans and the most committed ideologues will be the most susceptible to holding contradictory policy positions with regard to same-sex marriage and religious freedom.http://www.jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/28mass political behaviorpolitical knowledgemotivated reasoningpolitical psychologypartisanshippolarizationsame-sex marriage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aaron Dusso
Sheila Suess Kennedy
spellingShingle Aaron Dusso
Sheila Suess Kennedy
Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning
Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
mass political behavior
political knowledge
motivated reasoning
political psychology
partisanship
polarization
same-sex marriage
author_facet Aaron Dusso
Sheila Suess Kennedy
author_sort Aaron Dusso
title Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning
title_short Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning
title_full Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning
title_fullStr Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning
title_full_unstemmed Does Ignorance Matter? The Relative Importance of Civic Knowledge and the Human Tendency to Engage in Motivated Reasoning
title_sort does ignorance matter? the relative importance of civic knowledge and the human tendency to engage in motivated reasoning
publisher Midwest Public Affairs Conference
series Journal of Public and Nonprofit Affairs
issn 2381-3717
publishDate 2015-03-01
description It has long been understood that political knowledge in the U.S. is very low. For those who care about the quality of American democracy, this is a big problem. In attempting to find a solution, many people often blame education. While increasing civic knowledge is a laudatory goal, increased political sophistication does not necessarily turn individuals into good democratic citizens. Research in cognitive and social psychology paints a picture of people as motivated reasoners. Instead of having an open-minded engagement with issues, individuals typically only seek, see, and understand information in a manner that reinforces what they already believe. Here, we examine motivated reasoning and argue that the strongest partisans and the most committed ideologues will be the most susceptible to holding contradictory policy positions with regard to same-sex marriage and religious freedom.
topic mass political behavior
political knowledge
motivated reasoning
political psychology
partisanship
polarization
same-sex marriage
url http://www.jpna.org/index.php/jpna/article/view/28
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