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      Moral reframing: A technique for effective and persuasive communication across political divides

      1 , 2
      Social and Personality Psychology Compass
      Wiley

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          When Morality Opposes Justice: Conservatives Have Moral Intuitions that Liberals may not Recognize

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            Party over policy: The dominating impact of group influence on political beliefs.

            Four studies demonstrated both the power of group influence in persuasion and people's blindness to it. Even under conditions of effortful processing, attitudes toward a social policy depended almost exclusively upon the stated position of one's political party. This effect overwhelmed the impact of both the policy's objective content and participants' ideological beliefs (Studies 1-3), and it was driven by a shift in the assumed factual qualities of the policy and in its perceived moral connotations (Study 4). Nevertheless, participants denied having been influenced by their political group, although they believed that other individuals, especially their ideological adversaries, would be so influenced. The underappreciated role of social identity in persuasion is discussed.
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              The psychology of the unthinkable: taboo trade-offs, forbidden base rates, and heretical counterfactuals.

              Five studies explored cognitive, affective, and behavioral responses to proscribed forms of social cognition. Experiments 1 and 2 revealed that people responded to taboo trade-offs that monetized sacred values with moral outrage and cleansing. Experiments 3 and 4 revealed that racial egalitarians were least likely to use, and angriest at those who did use, race-tainted base rates and that egalitarians who inadvertently used such base rates tried to reaffirm their fair-mindedness. Experiment 5 revealed that Christian fundamentalists were most likely to reject heretical counterfactuals that applied everyday causal schemata to Biblical narratives and to engage in moral cleansing after merely contemplating such possibilities. Although the results fit the sacred-value-protection model (SVPM) better than rival formulations, the SVPM must draw on cross-cultural taxonomies of relational schemata to specify normative boundaries on thought.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Social and Personality Psychology Compass
                Soc Personal Psychol Compass
                Wiley
                1751-9004
                1751-9004
                December 18 2019
                December 2019
                December 09 2019
                December 2019
                : 13
                : 12
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Rotman School of ManagementUniversity of Toronto
                [2 ]Stanford University
                Article
                10.1111/spc3.12501
                4e90271a-ab59-4944-a23e-3704a7ecb91d
                © 2019

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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