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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Dimensions of the Relationship between the Individual and Her Unique Worldview Construction
Levi Geir Eidhamarsubject
atheismlcsh:BL1-2790media_common.quotation_subject050109 social psychology0603 philosophy ethics and religionSuperordinate goalslcsh:Religions. Mythology. RationalismPerceptionCognitive dissonanceOpenness to experience0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesDimension (data warehouse)conversionsecularisationapodictic certaintymedia_commonfaith060303 religions & theologyintellectual humility05 social sciencesReligious studiesopen-mindedness06 humanities and the artsCertaintyagnosticismConfirmation biasNaïve realism (psychology)PsychologySocial psychologyVDP::Humaniora: 000::Teologi og religionsvitenskap: 150::Religionsvitenskap religionshistorie: 153beliefdescription
Each individual constructs his own private worldview using elements from established worldview traditions. The biographical character of this formation makes this the individual’s “Unique Worldview Construction” (UWC). The purpose of this theoretical study is to analyse the dynamic relationship between the individual and her own UWC. It describes more how than what he believes in or denies. The variation is exceedingly complex. To make it accessible, the complexity is crystallized into seven dimensions: (1) The authority structure deals with the individual’s perception of herself as being superordinate/subordinate to her own UWC. (2) The importance dimension analyses the span from indifference to involvement among a variety of religious/nonreligious, age, and gender cohorts. (3) The certainty dimension explores doubt versus confidence, using theories like confirmation bias, naïve realism, and cognitive dissonance. (4) The dimension of one’s relationship to rejected beliefs describes different ways of being inclusive/exclusive. (5) The emotional dimension depicts the individual’s weak/strong and negative/positive feelings towards different elements of her UWC. (6) The openness dimension sheds light on the respective traits of being introverted/extroverted regarding one’s private worldview. (7) The continuity dimension explores different development patterns, along with complex pre/post-conversion and deconversion processes. The different dimensions partly correlate to each other.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-03-21 | Religions |