Browse Books By Subject
- Cognitive Psychology
- Attention
- Auditory Perception
- Cognition & Emotion
- Cognitive Neuropsychology
- Cognitive Science
- Connectionism/Neural Nets
- Consciousness & Cognition
- Creativity
- Dyslexia
- Ecological Psychology
- Emotion
- Imagery
- Individual Differences/IQ
- Psychology of Language
- Learning
- Mathematical Cognition
- Memory
- Motivation
- Motor Skills
- Odor/Olfaction/Smell
- Perception
- Psychology of Music
- Psychology of Reading
- Speech Perception & Production
- Taste
- Thinking, Reasoning & Problem Solving
- Touch
- Visual Cognition
- Visual Perception
- Psychology of Writing
- Counseling Psychology
- Critical Psychology
- Developmental Psychology
- Adolescent Development
- Adulthood
- Attachment
- Bilingualism - Second Language
- Biological Development
- Childcare
- Child Development
- Children & the Media
- Child Abuse
- Cognitive Development
- Cultural Development
- Developmental Psychopathology
- Development of Social Cognition
- Emotional Development
- Gerontology (Ageing)
- Gender Development
- Infancy
- Language Development
- Lifespan Development
- Moral Development
- Motor Development
- Neonates
- Parenting and Families
- Perceptual Development
- Piagetian Studies
- Social Development & Personality Development
- Theory of Mind
- Theories of Development
- Economic Psychology
- Educational Psychology
- Environmental Psychology
- Evolutionary Psychology
- Feminist Psychology
- Health Psychology
- History of Psychology
- Multidisciplinary Psychology
- Neuropsychology
- Amnesia & Memory Disorders
- Aphasia
- Apraxia
- Child Neuropsychology
- Developmental Language Disorders
- Clinical Neuropsychology
- Epilepsy
- Laterality (Left & Right Domains)
- Neuropsychological Rehabilitation
- Neuropsychological Tests & Assessments
- Speech & Communication Disorders
- Speech Production Disorders (including Stuttering)
- Parapsychology
- Philosophy of Mind
- Philosophy of Psychology
- Psychological Methods & Statistics
- Introductory & Intermediate Statistics
- Experimental Design & Research Methods
- Qualitative & Mixed Methods
- Quantitative Methods
- SPSS/PASW Statistics
- SAS, MATLAB, & other software applications
- Regression Analysis & Multivariate Statistics
- Factor Analysis, SEM, Multilevel & Longitudinal Modeling
- Power Analysis & Effect Sizes
- Meta Analysis
- Social Psychology
- Applied Social Psychology
- Attitudes & Persuasion
- Social Influence
- Attribution
- Criminology & Delinquency
- Cross Cultural Psychology
- Gender Identity & Sex Roles
- Group Processes
- Intergroup Behavior
- Interpersonal Processes & Communication
- Non-verbal Communication
- Personality
- Political Psychology
- Prejudice
- Religion
- Self & Social Identity
- Social Cognition
- Social Constructionism
- Social Psychology of Organizations
- Social Representation
- Sport Psychology
- Work & Organizational Psychology
- Introductory Work/Organizational Psychology
- Organizational Communication
- Leadership
- Executive Coaching
- Personality & Identity at Work
- Stress & Emotion in the Workplace
- Work & Leisure
- Work Motivation
- Personnel Selection, Assessment, & Human Resource Management
- Industrial/Organization Psychology Tests & Assessments
- Consumer Psychology
- Psychology & Nursing
- Developmental Neuroscience
- Social Neuroscience
- Clinical Psychology & Mental Health
The Psychology of Closed Mindedness
- Buy this E-Book
- e-Book: 208 pages
- Also available in Hardback
- Published: June 2004
- ISBN: 978-0-203-50696-7
- Publisher: Psychology Press
Sharing & Social Bookmarking:
Question about this product?
- By Arie W. Kruglanski.
Series: Essays in Social Psychology.
The fundamental phenomenon of human closed-mindedness is treated in this volume. Prior psychological treatments of closed-mindedness have typically approached it from a psychodynamic perspective and have viewed it in terms of individual pathology. By contrast, the present approach stresses the epistemic functionality of closed-mindedness and its essential role in judgement and decision-making. Far from being restricted to a select group of individuals suffering from an improper socialization, closed-mindedness is something we all experience on a daily basis. Such mundane situational conditions as time pressure, noise, fatigue, or alcoholic intoxication, for example, are all known to increase the difficulty of information processing, and may contribute to one's experienced need for nonspecific closure. Whether constituting a dimension of stable individual differences, or being engendered situationally - the need for closure, once aroused, is shown to produce the very same consequences. These fundamentally include the tendency to 'seize' on early, closure-affording 'evidence', and to 'freeze' upon it thus becoming impervious to subsequent, potentially important, information.
Though such consequences form a part of the individual's personal experience, they have significant implications for interpersonal, group and inter-group phenomena as well. The present volume describes these in detail and grounds them in numerous research findings of theoretical and 'real world' relevance to a wide range of topics including stereotyping, empathy, communication, in-group favouritism and political conservatism. Throughout, a distinction is maintained between the need for a nonspecific closure (i.e., any closure as long as it is firm and definite) and needs for specific closures (i.e., for judgments whose particular contents are desired by an individual).
Theory and research discussed in this book should be of interest to upper level undergraduates, graduate students and faculty in social, cognitive, and personality psychology as well as in sociology, political science and business administration.