Conspiracy Theorizing

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Author_Gerald Arbuckle
authoritarian leaders
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Category1=Non-Fiction
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Christian scripture
Christianity
conspiracy theory
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cultural fragmentation
culture chaos
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fundamentalism
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magical thinking
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paranoia in society
polarization
populism
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psychological roots of scapegoating
religious social psychology
sociological analysis religion
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stigma mechanisms
uncertainty avoidance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032750484
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Feb 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Conspiracy Theorizing explore how individuals with the Christian faith should react to conspiracy theories, their untruths, and their dangers. This book outlines the way that conspiracy theories are the fundamental basis for this stigmatization and scapegoating. It goes further to explain that scapegoating is fostering extreme divisions within societies and between nations with each side often demonizing the other.

This book states how conspiracy theories satisfy people’s needs for certainty, security, and a positive self-image in a world that they feel is disintegrating. Uncovering deeper, when the comforting securities of cultures crumble, paranoia makes sense. This book demonstrates that an inability to live with uncertainty and ambiguity draws people to conspiracy theories when they validate their apprehensions. The commentary in this book also validates that since conspiracy theories can never be verified by objective research and truths they are one of the most difficult subjects to uncover.

This book aims to answer these questions: What are conspiracy theories? Why do they arise, especially in times of cultural upheavals? Are they harmful? What do the Christian Scriptures say about them? Readers interested in religion, Christianity, and conspiracy theories would enjoy this book.

Gerald A. Arbuckle, SM, theologian and Cambridge-trained social anthropologist is an award-winning author, and his most recent book is The Pandemic and the People of God. He was recently awarded an honorary Doctorate of the Australian Catholic University “for bringing the interplay between faith and reason to bear on complex religious and social policy issues."

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