Conspiratorial thinking is an indelible part of American politics; indeed, conspiracy theories proliferated in North America even before the founding of the United States. A current headwind of trends appears to facilitate a surge in conspiratorial thinking, including the increased spread and accessibility of misinformation, steady declines in public trust in authority figures, and an increasingly polarized electorate marked by mutual partisan animosity. The annual symposium of the UC Irvine Center for Neuropolitics brought together experts in law, political science, neuroscience, philosophy, and psychology to discuss why and how conspiracy thought develops and persists. This paper synthesizes the insights from that symposium, addressing the foundations of conspiracy thinking in both individuals and society as a whole, and its place in the current American political landscape. Through integrating various disciplinary perspectives, the symposium aimed to identify possible pathways to alleviating the prevalence and influence of conspiratorial thinking.
Conspiracy thinking in American politics.
Steven Gong,Davin L. Phoenix,George E. Marcus,Laiyla Santillan,Cailin O’Connor,Peter H. Ditto,Karen M. Douglas,Hemant Kakkar,D. Kaye,Neil Levy,Lauren N. Ross,Mark Fisher
Published 2026 in Politics and the life sciences
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- Publication year
2026
- Venue
Politics and the life sciences
- Publication date
2026-02-09
- Fields of study
Medicine, Philosophy, Political Science
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Semantic Scholar
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