Today I learned that you can also spell "renaissance" as "renascence." That is crazy! (I learned this because the latter spelling is used in the classic paper https://t.co/kibbYiQzEU).
@patrickqmason My best answer: politically motivated reasoning ("where individuals interpret information through the lens of their party commitment") is *the* key frame through which most medium/high-informed citizens come to political positions in modern
An interesting article in the Atlantic introduced me to “Partisan Motivated Reasoning” which would got someway to explain the strange distortion of logic where a party insists on a diagnosis (IC) or culture/DNA diagnostic test but won’t offer evidence. htt
@steviedubyu Thanks for asking, this prompted me to double-check literature and find some studies I hadn't seen before. So: Nice on NZ flag ref: https://t.co/YkfhjThdP4 On energy policy: https://t.co/sZtFcqbnRo Older one: https://t.co/tRRkNZN1ZR Also good:
@kegill @Google Ignorance, apathy, fear, and approval, with a heaping portion of partisan motivating reasoning: https://t.co/BZ84BBlNpn
@Ben_Tappin @mjbsp @n_stenhou @BrendanNyhan @peyton_k @aecoppock @andyguess Bolsen et al 2014 "we find strong support for the argument that trust in one’s party moderates the effects stemming from partisan motivated reasoning" https://t.co/kIQSPcyQYx
Partisanship and the perceptual screen in Behavior class today. Bolsen, Druckman, & Lomax-Cook is an underrated read. https://t.co/5N4Ya7xLBt
Latest PB: Bolsen, Druckman & Cook on Influence of Partisan Motivated Reasoning on Public Opinion http://t.co/I3hzQy3Ecv
When does partisan motivated reasoning affect opinions on policy? http://t.co/tvH86gL3Fm