@Soundwave1976@lemmy.world to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world • 2 months agoWhat does cognitive dissonance mean?message-square48fedilinkarrow-up151file-text
arrow-up151message-squareWhat does cognitive dissonance mean?@Soundwave1976@lemmy.world to Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world • 2 months agomessage-square48fedilinkfile-text
minus-square@Varyk@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilink25•2 months agoholding two conflicting beliefs at the same time. like you don’t believe in the death penalty, but you read about a child molester and want them to die.
minus-square@SatyrSack@lemmy.onelinkfedilink9•2 months agoNot just that. Cognitive dissonance is when someone realizes that they hold conflicting beliefs. Most people that hold conflicting beliefs have not yet experienced that dissonance. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonance
minus-square@Varyk@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilink3•edit-22 months agoI don’t think that article is correct. I’ve never understood subsequent realization to be integral to the dissonance itself, which already exists regardless of one’s awareness of it. It’s like insisting that you are not depressed unless you “realize” you’re depressed. unless by “realization” that article simply mean experiencing conflicting emotions, which is the cognitive dissonance itself. requiring “realization” of a feeling as a prerequisite to that feeling existing doesn’t check out.
minus-squareComradeSharkfuckerlinkfedilinkEnglish5•2 months agoLike you don’t believe in the death penalty, but you read about a child molester and believe they should be killed* I think this is more accurate, wanting them to die but believing that they shouldn’t be killed is logically sound
holding two conflicting beliefs at the same time.
like you don’t believe in the death penalty, but you read about a child molester and want them to die.
That really helps, thank you!
Sure thing!
Not just that. Cognitive dissonance is when someone realizes that they hold conflicting beliefs. Most people that hold conflicting beliefs have not yet experienced that dissonance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_dissonance
I don’t think that article is correct.
I’ve never understood subsequent realization to be integral to the dissonance itself, which already exists regardless of one’s awareness of it.
It’s like insisting that you are not depressed unless you “realize” you’re depressed.
unless by “realization” that article simply mean experiencing conflicting emotions, which is the cognitive dissonance itself.
requiring “realization” of a feeling as a prerequisite to that feeling existing doesn’t check out.
Like you don’t believe in the death penalty, but you read about a child molester and believe they should be killed*
I think this is more accurate, wanting them to die but believing that they shouldn’t be killed is logically sound