Reflective political reasoning: political disagreement and empathy
Reflective political reasoning: political disagreement and empathy
As political polarization increases across many of the world's established democracies, many citizens are unwilling to appreciate and consider the viewpoints of those who disagree with them. Previous research shows that this lack of reflection can undermine democratic accountability. The purpose of this paper is to study whether empathy for the other can motivate people to reason reflectively about politics. Extant studies have largely studied trait-level differences in the ability and inclination of individuals to engage in reflection. Most of these studies focus on observational moderators, which makes it difficult to make strong claims about the effects of being in a reflective state on political decision making. We extend this research by using a survey experiment with a large and heterogeneous sample of UK citizens (N = 2014) to investigate whether a simple empathy intervention can induce people to consider opposing viewpoints and incorporate those views in their opinion about a pressing political issue. We find that actively imagining the feelings and thoughts of someone one disagrees with prompts more reflection in the way that people reason about political issues as well as elicits empathic feelings of concern towards those with opposing viewpoints. We further examine whether empathy facilitates openness to attitude change in the counter-attitudinal direction and find that exposure to an opposing perspective (without its empathy component) per se is enough to prompt attitude change. Our study paints a more nuanced picture of the relationship between empathy, reflection and policy attitudes.
democracy, empathy, emotions in politics, experiment, political polarization, political psychology, universal basic income
740-761
Muradova, Lala
5f2595b4-c347-4e45-bae5-bb0f5b397fa4
Arceneaux, Kevin
8f3916fc-d6b2-45f2-a0f0-53893c81f7f2
8 November 2021
Muradova, Lala
5f2595b4-c347-4e45-bae5-bb0f5b397fa4
Arceneaux, Kevin
8f3916fc-d6b2-45f2-a0f0-53893c81f7f2
Muradova, Lala and Arceneaux, Kevin
(2021)
Reflective political reasoning: political disagreement and empathy.
European Journal of Political Research, 61 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/1475-6765.12490).
Abstract
As political polarization increases across many of the world's established democracies, many citizens are unwilling to appreciate and consider the viewpoints of those who disagree with them. Previous research shows that this lack of reflection can undermine democratic accountability. The purpose of this paper is to study whether empathy for the other can motivate people to reason reflectively about politics. Extant studies have largely studied trait-level differences in the ability and inclination of individuals to engage in reflection. Most of these studies focus on observational moderators, which makes it difficult to make strong claims about the effects of being in a reflective state on political decision making. We extend this research by using a survey experiment with a large and heterogeneous sample of UK citizens (N = 2014) to investigate whether a simple empathy intervention can induce people to consider opposing viewpoints and incorporate those views in their opinion about a pressing political issue. We find that actively imagining the feelings and thoughts of someone one disagrees with prompts more reflection in the way that people reason about political issues as well as elicits empathic feelings of concern towards those with opposing viewpoints. We further examine whether empathy facilitates openness to attitude change in the counter-attitudinal direction and find that exposure to an opposing perspective (without its empathy component) per se is enough to prompt attitude change. Our study paints a more nuanced picture of the relationship between empathy, reflection and policy attitudes.
Text
European J Political Res - 2021 - MURADOVA - Reflective political reasoning Political disagreement and empathy
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 September 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 October 2021
Published date: 8 November 2021
Keywords:
democracy, empathy, emotions in politics, experiment, political polarization, political psychology, universal basic income
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Local EPrints ID: 506988
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506988
ISSN: 0304-4130
PURE UUID: 7b51d196-b23d-4a19-8aaa-0b0ab64c26d1
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Date deposited: 25 Nov 2025 17:37
Last modified: 26 Nov 2025 03:09
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Author:
Lala Muradova
Author:
Kevin Arceneaux
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