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RCGD Winter Seminar Series: Fighting Phantoms: Disagreement vs. Disdain in the American Body Politic
Eli Finkel
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Fighting Phantoms: Disagreement vs. Disdain in the American Body Politic
Monday, April 3, 2023 (3:30 PM – 5:00 PM)
Eli Finkel
Professor of Psychology
Kellogg School of Management
Northwestern University
According to legend, Ben Franklin informed a Philadelphia lady in 1787 that the Constitutional Convention had created a republic rather than a monarchy—“if you can keep it.” But what can individual citizens do to “keep” a republic? In his Farewell Address nine years later, George Washington offered a potential answer: resist extreme partisanship.
This presentation considers whether partisanship in America today poses a threat to the Republic. Ideological and policy disagreement among American partisans is modest, but feelings toward opposing partisans is curdling from dislike into hatred. A major foundation for this hatred is a distorted perception of opposing partisans, which means that we may be fighting phantoms rather than adversaries.
There are many ways to mitigate the most corrosive elements of our politics, but they will be difficult to implement insofar as we—the individuals who make up America’s body politic—prize partisan victory over democratic norms.
Monday, April 3, 2023 (3:30 PM – 5:00 PM)
Eli Finkel
Professor of Psychology
Kellogg School of Management
Northwestern University
According to legend, Ben Franklin informed a Philadelphia lady in 1787 that the Constitutional Convention had created a republic rather than a monarchy—“if you can keep it.” But what can individual citizens do to “keep” a republic? In his Farewell Address nine years later, George Washington offered a potential answer: resist extreme partisanship.
This presentation considers whether partisanship in America today poses a threat to the Republic. Ideological and policy disagreement among American partisans is modest, but feelings toward opposing partisans is curdling from dislike into hatred. A major foundation for this hatred is a distorted perception of opposing partisans, which means that we may be fighting phantoms rather than adversaries.
There are many ways to mitigate the most corrosive elements of our politics, but they will be difficult to implement insofar as we—the individuals who make up America’s body politic—prize partisan victory over democratic norms.
Building: | Institute For Social Research |
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Website: | |
Event Type: | Workshop / Seminar |
Tags: | Politics, Psychology |
Source: | Happening @ Michigan from Research Center for Group Dynamics (RCGD), Institute for Social Research, Department of Political Science |