Difference between revisions of "Cognitive dissonance"

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'''Cognitive dissonance''' is a psychological term to describe the discomfort people feel when their beliefs, ideas or values are incongruent.<ref name="Festinger, L. 1957">Festinger, L. (1957). ''A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance''. California: Stanford University Press.</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Festinger | first1 = L. | year = 1962 | title = Cognitive dissonance | url = | journal = Scientific American | volume = 207 | issue = 4| pages = 93–107 | doi=10.1038/scientificamerican1062-93}}</ref>
 
'''Cognitive dissonance''' is a psychological term to describe the discomfort people feel when their beliefs, ideas or values are incongruent.<ref name="Festinger, L. 1957">Festinger, L. (1957). ''A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance''. California: Stanford University Press.</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Festinger | first1 = L. | year = 1962 | title = Cognitive dissonance | url = | journal = Scientific American | volume = 207 | issue = 4| pages = 93–107 | doi=10.1038/scientificamerican1062-93}}</ref>
  
This forms a kind of self-protection from wildly different new ideas which seems to be necessary to give people's lives a consistency and direction. It helps to explain why different people tend to explain similar evidence differently - we are all biased in favour of explanations which fit with our (different) prior beliefs.
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This forms a kind of self-protection from wildly different new ideas which seems to be necessary to give people's lives a consistency and direction. It helps to explain why different people tend to explain similar evidence differently - we are all biased in favour of explanations which fit with our (different) prior beliefs.
  
 
==Relevance to the deep state==
 
==Relevance to the deep state==

Revision as of 04:08, 9 October 2015

Concept.png Cognitive dissonanceRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Typepsychological

Cognitive dissonance is a psychological term to describe the discomfort people feel when their beliefs, ideas or values are incongruent.[1][2]

This forms a kind of self-protection from wildly different new ideas which seems to be necessary to give people's lives a consistency and direction. It helps to explain why different people tend to explain similar evidence differently - we are all biased in favour of explanations which fit with our (different) prior beliefs.

Relevance to the deep state

Cognitive dissonance is a very importance factor when deceiving people, since it on occasions can induce people to reject the evidence of their own eyes and ears, if they are reporting information which strongly conflicts with people's prior beliefs. The deep state has exploited this fact to help promote its official narratives and stifle conflicting explanations - even those which are better supported by observable reality.

False flag attacks

Full article: False flags

The classic example of cognitive dissonance is provided by False flag attacks. Governments tend to exploit their control of syllabuses to try to inculcate certain ideas in the (receptive) minds of young children. Central among these are the importance of government and obeying rules set by government lawmakers etc. Foreign countries are sometimes portrayed as despicably, but never ones "own" country.

This - often subconscious - set of beliefs is nurtured not only unconsciously by the society in which people live, but often consciously by the commercially-controlled media, which is typically centralised and also subject to a similar pro-government 'we-are-the-good-guys' influence. This help explain the difficulty many people have in understanding that false flag attacks are a fact of life and continue to be widely carried out.

As non-psychopaths, 99% of humanity are unfamiliar with the mind which can murder and deceive others without suffering attacks of conscience. This new to the concept of a false flag are often prone to wonder "Why would government kill their own citizens?" This indicates that they have a simplistic faith in the good intentions of "their" leaders, probably not as a result of conscious calculation but subconscious inculcation from an early age. Cognitive dissonance supports the maintenance of this naivety even in the face of otherwise powerful evidence.


 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthorDate
Michael Yeadon“It’s become absolutely clear to me, even when I talk to intelligent people, friends, acquaintances … and they can tell I’m telling them something important, but they get to the point [where I say] ‘your government is lying to you in a way that could lead to your death and that of your children,’ and they can’t begin to engage with it. And I think maybe 10% of them understand what I said, and 90% of those blank their understanding of it because it is too difficult. And my concern is, we are going to lose this, because people will not deal with the possibility that anyone is so evil…”Michael YeadonApril 2021
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References

  1. Festinger, L. (1957). A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance. California: Stanford University Press.
  2. Festinger, L. (1962). "Cognitive dissonance". Scientific American. 207 (4): 93–107. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1062-93.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").