Conspiracy theories as quasi-religious mentality: an integrated account from cognitive science, social representations theory, and frame theory

Conspiracy theories (CTs) can take many forms and vary widely in popularity, the intensity with which they are believed and their effects on individual and collective behavior. An integrated account of CTs thus needs to explain how they come to appeal to potential believers, how they spread from one person to the next via communication, and how they motivate collective action. We summarize these aspects under the labels of stick, spread, and action. We propose the quasi-religious hypothesis for CTs: drawing on cognitive science of religion, social representations theory, and frame theory. We use cognitive science of religion to describe the main features of the content of CTs that explain how they come to stick: CTs are quasi-religious representations in that their contents, forms and functions parallel those found in beliefs of institutionalized religions. However, CTs are quasi-religious in that CTs and the communities that support them, lack many of the institutional features of organized religions. We use social representations theory to explain how CTs spread as devices for making sense of sudden events that threaten existing worldviews. CTs allow laypersons to interpret such events by relating them to common sense, thereby defusing some of the anxiety that those events generate. We use frame theory to explain how some, but not all CTs mobilize collective counter-conspiratorial action by identifying a target and by proposing credible and concrete rationales for action. We specify our integrated account in 13 propositions.

[1]  H. Joffe Risk and 'The other' , 1999 .

[2]  Wolfgang Wagner,et al.  Vernacular science knowledge: its role in everyday life communication , 2007 .

[3]  S. Freud The Psychopathology of Everyday Life , 1915 .

[4]  A. Grimwood,et al.  Denying AIDS: conspiracy theories, pseudoscience and human tragedy , 2010, AIDS care.

[5]  Nicky Hayes,et al.  Everyday Discourse and Common Sense: The Theory of Social Representations , 2005 .

[6]  Heidi J Larson,et al.  Public health response to influenza A(H1N1) as an opportunity to build public trust. , 2010, JAMA.

[7]  S. Atran In Gods We Trust: The Evolutionary Landscape of Religion , 2002 .

[8]  S. Condor,et al.  Conspiracy accounts as intergroup theories: challenging dominant understandings of social power and political legitimacy , 2013 .

[9]  P. Berger The Sacred Canopy , 1967 .

[10]  J. Prooijen Suspicions of Injustice: The Sense-Making Function of Belief in Conspiracy Theories , 2011 .

[11]  S. Moscovici La psychanalyse, son image et son public , 2004 .

[12]  H. Zukier The Conspiratorial Imperative: Medieval Jewry in Western Europe , 1987 .

[13]  Clark McCauley,et al.  The popularity of conspiracy theories of presidential assassination: A Bayesian analysis. , 1979 .

[14]  E. Goffman Frame analysis: An essay on the organization of experience , 1974 .

[15]  H. Whitehouse Modes of Religiosity: A Cognitive Theory of Religious Transmission , 2004 .

[16]  M. Shermer,et al.  The Believing Brain , 2011 .

[17]  Lawrence A. Hirschfeld,et al.  Race in the Making: Cognition, Culture, and the Child's Construction of Human Kinds , 1996 .

[18]  J. Agassi,et al.  A Cognitive Theory of Religion [and Comments and Reply] , 1980, Current Anthropology.

[19]  J. Shaoul Human Error , 1973, Nature.

[20]  Michael Billig,et al.  Arguing and Thinking: A Rhetorical Approach to Social Psychology , 1987 .

[21]  Adrian Vermeule,et al.  Conspiracy Theories , 2008 .

[22]  R. Inglehart Extremist Political Positions and Perceptions of Conspiracy: Even Paranoids Have Real Enemies , 1987 .

[23]  Ralph L. Rosnow,et al.  Psychology of rumor reconsidered. , 1980 .

[24]  Robert M. Entman,et al.  Framing: Toward Clarification of a Fractured Paradigm , 1993 .

[25]  N. Haslam,et al.  Essentialist beliefs about social categories. , 2000, The British journal of social psychology.

[26]  A. Bangerter,et al.  Transformation between scientific and social representations of conception: the method of serial reproduction. , 2000, The British journal of social psychology.

[27]  Bernard Rimé,et al.  Collective Memory of Political Events : Social Psychological Perspectives , 1997 .

[28]  Baruch Fischhoff,et al.  Why Study Risk Perception , 1982 .

[29]  S. Hilgartner,et al.  The Rise and Fall of Social Problems: A Public Arenas Model , 1988, American Journal of Sociology.

[30]  W. Gamson,et al.  Media Discourse and Public Opinion on Nuclear Power: A Constructionist Approach , 1989, American Journal of Sociology.

[31]  Bradley Franks The Nature of Unnaturalness in Religious Representations: Negation and Concept Combination , 2003 .

[32]  T. Luckmann Shrinking Transcendence, Expanding Religion? , 1990 .

[33]  Joseph Henrich,et al.  The Zeus Problem: Why Representational Content Biases Cannot Explain Faith in Gods , 2010 .

[34]  T. Luckmann The structural conditions of religious consciousness in modern societies , 1979 .

[35]  A. Tversky,et al.  Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases , 1974, Science.

[36]  F. C. P. Motta The theory of communicative action , 1991 .

[37]  P. Wagner-Egger,et al.  La vérité est ailleurs : corrélats de l'adhésion aux théories du complot , 2008 .

[38]  J. Barrett,et al.  Spreading Non-natural Concepts: The Role of Intuitive Conceptual Structures in Memory and Transmission of Cultural Materials ¤ , 2001 .

[39]  Georges Bataille,et al.  Theory of Religion , 1989 .

[40]  M. Marty,et al.  Accounting for fundamentalisms : the dynamic character of movements , 1996 .

[41]  S. Kalichman Comprar Denying AIDS · Conspiracy Theories, Pseudoscience, and Human Tragedy | Kalichman, Seth C. | 9780387794754 | Springer , 2009 .

[42]  B. Wynne Knowledges in Context , 1991 .

[43]  Scott Atran,et al.  Religious and Sacred Imperatives in Human Conflict , 2012, Science.

[44]  Lawrence A. Hirschfeld,et al.  How biological is essentialism , 1999 .

[45]  Martin W. Bauer,et al.  Towards a Paradigm for Research on Social Representations , 1999 .

[46]  F. Keil,et al.  Conceptualizing a Nonnatural Entity: Anthropomorphism in God Concepts , 1996, Cognitive Psychology.

[47]  Scott Atran,et al.  What Motivates Participation in Violent Political Action , 2009, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[48]  D. Bromley,et al.  The Satanism Scare , 1991 .

[49]  Martin Parker,et al.  The age of anxiety : conspiracy theory and the human sciences , 2003 .

[50]  S. Moscovici The Conspiracy Mentality , 1987 .

[51]  Justin L. Barrett,et al.  Why Would Anyone Believe in God , 2004 .

[52]  R. Lazarus Psychological stress and the coping process , 1970 .

[53]  D. Norman Categorization of action slips. , 1981 .

[54]  A. Downs Up and Down with Ecology--The Issue Attention Cycle , 1972 .

[55]  J. Durant,et al.  The public understanding of science , 1989, Nature.

[56]  Wolfgang Klein,et al.  Frame of analysis , 1995 .

[57]  Ustin,et al.  Spreading Non-natural Concepts : The Role of Intuitive Conceptual Structures in Memory and Transmission of Cultural Materials ¤ , 2004 .

[58]  B Fischhoff,et al.  Risk perception and communication unplugged: twenty years of process. , 1995, Risk analysis : an official publication of the Society for Risk Analysis.

[59]  Martin Voracek,et al.  Conspiracist ideation in Britain and Austria: evidence of a monological belief system and associations between individual psychological differences and real-world and fictitious conspiracy theories. , 2011, British journal of psychology.

[60]  F. Dubois-Arber,et al.  The normalization of AIDS in Western European countries. , 2000, Social science & medicine.

[61]  M. Hogg,et al.  Extremism and the psychology of uncertainty. , 2012 .

[62]  M. Cinnirella,et al.  A major event has a major cause: Evidence for the role of heuristics in reasoning about conspiracy theories , 2007, Social Psychological Review.

[63]  Robert S. Singh The Farrakhan Phenomenon: Race, Reaction, and the Paranoid Style in American Politics , 1997 .

[64]  J. Barrett,et al.  Ritual Intuitions: Cognitive Contributions to Judgments of Ritual Efficacy , 2001 .

[65]  P. Boyer Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought , 2001 .

[66]  Scott Atran,et al.  Memory and Mystery: The Cultural Selection of Minimally Counterintuitive Narratives , 2006, Cogn. Sci..

[67]  A. Bangerter,et al.  Lay perceptions of collectives at the outbreak of the H1N1 epidemic: heroes, villains and victims , 2011, Public understanding of science.

[68]  Pascal Wagner-Egger,et al.  The Truth Lies Elsewhere: Correlates of Belief in Conspiracy Theories , 2007 .

[69]  W. Downes Language and Religion: A cognitive theory of religion , 2010 .

[70]  O. Klein,et al.  When group representations serve social change: the speeches of Patrice Lumumba during the Congolese decolonization. , 2003, The British journal of social psychology.

[71]  Jeffrey M. Bale,et al.  Political paranoia v. political realism: on distinguishing between bogus conspiracy theories and genuine conspiratorial politics , 2007 .

[72]  Stephan Lewandowsky,et al.  Recursive Fury: Conspiracist Ideation in the Blogosphere in Response to Research on Conspiracist Ideation , 2013, Frontiers in psychology.

[73]  Robert P. Hawkins,et al.  Media Roles in a Social Movement: A Model of Ideology Diffusion , 1985 .

[74]  R. H. Knapp,et al.  A PSYCHOLOGY OF RUMOR , 1944 .

[75]  Scott Atran,et al.  Religion's evolutionary landscape: Counterintuition, commitment, compassion, communion , 2004, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[76]  I. Pyysiäinen How Religion Works: Towards a New Cognitive Science of Religion , 2001 .

[77]  A. Giddens The consequences of modernity , 1990 .

[78]  Craig Joseph,et al.  Conspiracy Thinking in the Middle East , 1994 .

[79]  W. Wagner,et al.  Collective symbolic coping with new technology: Knowledge, images and public discourse. , 2002, The British journal of social psychology.

[80]  M. Barreto,et al.  The Tea Party in the Age of Obama: Mainstream Conservatism or Out-Group Anxiety? , 2011 .

[81]  Karen M. Douglas,et al.  Dead and Alive , 2012, Diary of a Detour.

[82]  S. Gelman,et al.  The Essential Child : Origins of Essentialism in Everyday Thought , 2003 .

[83]  L. Bogart,et al.  Conspiracy Beliefs About Birth Control: Barriers to Pregnancy Prevention Among African Americans of Reproductive Age , 2005, Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education.

[84]  S. Guthrie,et al.  On a Cognitive Theory of Religion , 1980, Current Anthropology.

[85]  W. Wagner,et al.  How the sperm dominates the ovum — objectification by metaphor in the social representation of conception , 1995 .

[86]  E. Green,et al.  Discovery of the faithfulness gene: a model of transmission and transformation of scientific information. , 2008, The British journal of social psychology.

[87]  J. Byford Conspiracy Theories: A Critical Introduction , 2011 .

[88]  D. Snow,et al.  Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment , 2000 .

[89]  C. Peterson Faces in the Clouds , 2015 .

[90]  C. Sunstein,et al.  Conspiracy Theories: Causes and Cures* , 2009 .

[91]  B. Franks Negation and doubt in religious representations : context-dependence, emotion and action , 2004 .

[92]  M. Bloch Radical Interpretation in Religion: Are religious beliefs counter-intuitive? , 2002 .

[93]  Pascal Boyer,et al.  Cognitive templates for religious concepts: cross-cultural evidence for recall of counter-intuitive representations , 2001, Cogn. Sci..

[94]  H Roberts,et al.  Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity , 1994 .

[95]  M. Theunissen The other , 1984 .

[96]  J. Byford Anchoring and objectifying 'neocortical warfare': re-presentation of a biological metaphor in Serbian conspiracy literature , 2002 .

[97]  Ted Goertzel,et al.  Belief in Conspiracy Theories , 1994 .

[98]  E. Mcsweegan The Great Mortality: An Intimate History of the Black Death, the Most Devastating Plague of All Time , 2005 .

[99]  Robert N. McCauley,et al.  Bringing ritual to mind : psychological foundations of cultural forms , 2002 .

[100]  Jennifer Crocker,et al.  Belief in U.S. Government Conspiracies Against Blacks among Black and White College Students: Powerlessness or System Blame? , 1999 .

[101]  A. Furnham,et al.  Political paranoia and conspiracy theories , 2014 .