4.5 Article

Why people choose deliberate ignorance in times of societal transformation

Journal

COGNITION
Volume 229, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2022.105247

Keywords

Deliberate ignorance; Information avoidance; Emotion regulation; Political transformation; Memory politics

Funding

  1. Deutsche Hygiene Museum

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The study investigates the reasons behind deliberate ignorance and finds a wide range of reasons, with participants prioritizing cooperation and harmony over concerns of transparency and justice. The findings highlight the role of deliberate ignorance in shaping individual and collective memory culture and its impact on societal change.
The opening of East Germany's Stasi archives in 1991 has often been lauded as a model of transparency in a transformative period. Yet many citizens have rejected the opportunity to read their files. To examine the reasons people invoke for this deliberate ignorance, we combined survey methods from psychology with historio-graphical methodologies. Our findings reveal a diverse range of reasons for deliberate ignorance, including regulation of negative emotions, avoidance of personal conflict, scepticism about the information compiled, and rejection of the victorious political system's authority over the files. Participants thus appear to prioritise cooperation and harmony over justice concerns-in stark contrast to the institutional norm of transparency and justice. Shining a light on the role of deliberate ignorance at the individual level-and specifically the conver-gence or divergence of individual and collective memory culture-may help explain the pace of societal change.

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