Abstract
Political theory has mainly considered political deception as induced either by lies and manipulation or as the unintended consequence of misperceptions and illusions. This work aims to show that the misperception of reality, under psychological and emotional pressure, is often driven by the desire to believe what one wishes to be the cases even if a dispassionate consideration of date would lead to the opposite conclusion. The phenomenon of self-deception have sometimes been hinted in political analysis but rarely pursued and analyzed properly. This book which will be articulated in two parts: in the first, the philosophy of self-deception will be considered in order to provide a clear notion and an adequate account of the phenomenon, and to explore the issue of responsibility for one’s self-deception. In the second part of the book, self-deception will be applied to political analysis and some cases will be analyzed as illustration of political self-decepion
Lingua originale | Inglese |
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Editore | Cambridge University Press |
Numero di pagine | 261 |
ISBN (stampa) | 978-1108423724 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 1 gen 2018 |
Keywords
- Self-Deception
- cold biases
- honest mistakes
- ideologies
- lies
- make believe effect
- moral and political responsibility for self-deception
- motivated decision-making
- motivated irrationality
- policy failure
- political deception
- political illusions
- precommitment.
- wishful thinking