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This book offers a timely exploration of our patterns of engagement
with politics, news, and information in current high-choice
information environments It analyzes the issue plaguing our society
today - The spread of misinformation and its impact on the public
sphere, our politics and our everyday lives The book offers
insights into the processes that influence the supply of
misinformation and factors influencing how and why people expose
themselves to and process information that may support or
contradict their beliefs and attitudes A team of authors from
across a range of disciplines address the phenomena of knowledge
resistance and its causes and consequences at the macro- as well as
the micro-level The chapters take a philosophical look at the
notion of knowledge resistance, before moving on to discuss issues
such as misinformation and fake news, psychological mechanisms such
as motivated reasoning in processes of selective exposure and
attention, how people respond to evidence and fact-checking, the
role of political partisanship, political polarization over factual
beliefs, and how knowledge resistance might be counteracted This
book will have a broad appeal to scholars and students interested
in knowledge resistance, primarily within philosophy, psychology,
media and communication, and political science, as well as
journalists and policymakers
Concepts stand at the centre of human cognition. We use concepts in
categorizing objects and events in the world, in reasoning and
action, and in social interaction. It is therefore not surprising
that the study of concepts constitutes a central area of research
in philosophy and psychology, yet only recently have the two
disciplines developed greater interaction. Recent experiments in
psychology that test the role of concepts in categorizing and
reasoning have found a great deal of variation, across individuals
and cultures, in categorization behaviour. Meanwhile, philosophers
of language and mind have investigated the semantic properties of
concepts, and how concepts are related to linguistic meaning and
linguistic communication. A key motivation behind this was the idea
that concepts must be shared across individuals and cultures. With
the dawn of experimental philosophy, the proposal that the
experimental data from psychology lacks relevance to semantics is
increasingly difficult to defend. This volume brings together
leading psychologists and philosophers to advance the
interdisciplinary debate on the role of concepts in categorizing
and reasoning, the relationship between concepts and linguistic
meaning and communication, the challenges conceptual variation
poses to communication, and the social and political effects of
conceptual change.
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