Abstract

We conducted additional analyses of Pennycook et al.â[euro](TM)s (2015, Study 2) data to investigate the possibility that there would be ideological differences in â[euro]oebullshit receptivityâ[euro] that would be explained by individual differences in cognitive style and ability. As hypothesized, we observed that endorsement of neoliberal, free market ideology was significantly but modestly associated with bullshit receptivity. In addition, we observed a quadratic association, which indicated that ideological moderates were more susceptible to bullshit than ideological extremists. These relationships were explained, in part, by heuristic processing tendencies, faith in intuition, and lower verbal ability. Results are inconsistent with approaches suggesting that (a) there are no meaningful ideological differences in cognitive style or reasoning ability, (b) simplistic, certainty-oriented cognitive styles are generally associated with leftist (vs. rightist) economic preferences, or (c) simplistic, certainty-oriented cognitive styles are generally associated with extremist (vs. moderate) preferences. Theoretical and practical implications are briefly addressed.

Details

Title
Are neoliberals more susceptible to bullshit?
Author
Sterling, Joanna; Jost, John T; Pennycook, Gordon
Pages
352-360
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Jul 2016
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
ISSN
19302975
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1808897386
Copyright
Copyright Society for Judgment & Decision Making Jul 2016