Taming Intuition: How Reflection Minimizes Partisan Reasoning and Promotes Democratic Accountability

Kevin Arceneaux (Temple University, Philadelphia),Ryan J. Vander Wielen (Temple University, Philadelphia)

Taming Intuition: How Reflection Minimizes Partisan Reasoning and Promotes Democratic Accountability
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
11 August 2017
Pages
260
ISBN
9781108415101

Taming Intuition: How Reflection Minimizes Partisan Reasoning and Promotes Democratic Accountability

Kevin Arceneaux (Temple University, Philadelphia),Ryan J. Vander Wielen (Temple University, Philadelphia)

The success of democratic governance hinges on an electorate’s ability to reward elected officials who act faithfully and punish those who do not. Yet there is considerable variation among voters in their ability to objectively evaluate representatives’ performance. In this book the authors develop a theoretical model, the Intuitionist Model of Political Reasoning, which posits that this variation across voters is the result of individual differences in the predisposition to reflect on and to override partisan impulses. Individuals differ in partisan intuitions resulting from the strength of their attachments to parties, as well as the degree to which they are willing to engage in the cognitively taxing process of evaluating those intuitions. The balance of these forces - the strength of intuitions and the willingness to second guess one’s self - determines the extent to which individuals update their assessments of political parties and elected officials in a rational manner.

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