In this article we defend our contention that culture is prior to facts in resolving the gun debate. The basis for this position, simply put, is that culture is prior to facts in human cognition. Through an overlapping set of psychological and social mechanisms, individuals adopt the factual beliefs that are dominant among persons who share their cultural orientations. Far from being updated in light of new evidence, beliefs so formed operate as an evidentiary filter, inducing individuals to dismiss any contrary evidence as unreliable, particularly when that evidence is proffered by individuals of an opposing cultural affiliation. So even accepting - which we do - that individuals care about both what guns do and what guns mean, it\u27s idl...
Cultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one\u27s beliefs about societal risks to one...
There exist a criminology of firearms and an epidemiology of firearms use, but little in the way of ...
Which side of the gun debate loses ground after the Virginia Tech Massacre? Neither. Here\u27s why
In this article we defend our contention that culture is prior to facts in resolving the gun debate....
Can empirical data generate consensus about how to regulate firearms? If so, under what conditions? ...
The “Great American Gun Debate” isn’t really one debate but two (Kates & Kleck, 1997). The first is ...
Can empirical data generate consensus about how to regulate firearms? If so, under what conditions?...
What motivates individuals to support or oppose the legal regulation of guns? What sorts of evidence...
People disagree about the empirical dimensions of various public policy issues. It\u27s not surprisi...
In this article, Dan Kahan and Donald Braman expand upon the cultural theory of gun-risk perception ...
Our concern in this Essay is to explain the epistemic origins of political conflict. Citizens who ag...
The question of how strictly to regulate firearms has convulsed the national polity for the better p...
The United States has the 31st highest rate of gun violence in the world. During 2013, 33,636 peopl...
Why do members of the public disagree - sharply and persistently - about facts on which expert scien...
Objective: We developed and tested a gun-blame attribution model to explain why mass shootings do no...
Cultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one\u27s beliefs about societal risks to one...
There exist a criminology of firearms and an epidemiology of firearms use, but little in the way of ...
Which side of the gun debate loses ground after the Virginia Tech Massacre? Neither. Here\u27s why
In this article we defend our contention that culture is prior to facts in resolving the gun debate....
Can empirical data generate consensus about how to regulate firearms? If so, under what conditions? ...
The “Great American Gun Debate” isn’t really one debate but two (Kates & Kleck, 1997). The first is ...
Can empirical data generate consensus about how to regulate firearms? If so, under what conditions?...
What motivates individuals to support or oppose the legal regulation of guns? What sorts of evidence...
People disagree about the empirical dimensions of various public policy issues. It\u27s not surprisi...
In this article, Dan Kahan and Donald Braman expand upon the cultural theory of gun-risk perception ...
Our concern in this Essay is to explain the epistemic origins of political conflict. Citizens who ag...
The question of how strictly to regulate firearms has convulsed the national polity for the better p...
The United States has the 31st highest rate of gun violence in the world. During 2013, 33,636 peopl...
Why do members of the public disagree - sharply and persistently - about facts on which expert scien...
Objective: We developed and tested a gun-blame attribution model to explain why mass shootings do no...
Cultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one\u27s beliefs about societal risks to one...
There exist a criminology of firearms and an epidemiology of firearms use, but little in the way of ...
Which side of the gun debate loses ground after the Virginia Tech Massacre? Neither. Here\u27s why