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The psychology of talking about Muslims and terrorism

Posted on November 20, 2015 by Ted Bauer
The psychology of discussing terrorism

Consider this simple situational example: A boy notices his mother shut the door, and the room becomes less noisy; the correspondent inference is that she wanted quiet. Edward Jones, a social psychologist of the 1960s and 1970s, called that “attribute-effect… Continue Reading →

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Fundamental Explainers Correspondent Inference Theory, Human Behavior, ISIS, Psychology, Terrorism

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