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Ideology

An ideology is a set of beliefs or philosophies attributed to a person or group of persons, especially those held for reasons that are not purely epistemic,[1][2] in which "practical elements are as prominent as theoretical ones."[3] Formerly applied primarily to economic, political, or religious theories and policies, in a tradition going back to Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, more recent use treats the term as mainly condemnatory.[4]

The term was coined by Antoine Destutt de Tracy, a French Enlightenment aristocrat and philosopher, who conceived it in 1796 as the "science of ideas" to develop a rational system of ideas to oppose the irrational impulses of the mob. In political science, the term is used in a descriptive sense to refer to political belief systems.[4]

Etymology and history Edit

 
Antoine Destutt de Tracy (1754–1836)

The term ideology originates from French idéologie, itself deriving from combining Greek: idéā (ἰδέα, 'notion, pattern'; close to the Lockean sense of idea) and -logíā (-λογῐ́ᾱ, 'the study of').

The term ideology, and the system of ideas associated with it, was coined in 1796 by Antoine Destutt de Tracy while in prison pending trial during the Reign of Terror, where he read the works of Locke and Condillac.[5] Hoping to form a secure foundation for the moral and political sciences, Tracy devised the term for a "science of ideas," basing such upon two things:

  1. the sensations that people experience as they interact with the material world; and
  2. the ideas that form in their minds due to those sensations.

He conceived ideology as a liberal philosophy that would defend individual liberty, property, free markets, and constitutional limits on state power. He argues that, among these aspects, ideology is the most generic term because the 'science of ideas' also contains the study of their expression and deduction.[6] The coup that overthrew Maximilien Robespierre allowed Tracy to pursue his work.[6] Tracy reacted to the terroristic phase of the revolution (during the Napoleonic regime) by trying to work out a rational system of ideas to oppose the irrational mob impulses that had nearly destroyed him.

A subsequent early source for the near-original meaning of ideology is Hippolyte Taine's work on the Ancien Régime, Origins of Contemporary France I. He describes ideology as rather like teaching philosophy via the Socratic method, though without extending the vocabulary beyond what the general reader already possessed, and without the examples from observation that practical science would require. Taine identifies it not just with Destutt De Tracy, but also with his milieu, and includes Condillac as one of its precursors.

Napoleon Bonaparte came to view ideology as a term of abuse, which he often hurled against his liberal foes in Tracy's Institutional. According to Karl Mannheim's historical reconstruction of the shifts in the meaning of ideology, the modern meaning of the word was born when Napoleon used it to describe his opponents as "the ideologues." Tracy's major book, The Elements of Ideology, was soon translated into the major languages of Europe.

In the century following Tracy, the term ideology moved back and forth between positive and negative connotations. During this next generation, when post-Napoleonic governments adopted a reactionary stance, influenced the Italian, Spanish and Russian thinkers who had begun to describe themselves as "liberals" and who attempted to reignite revolutionary activity in the early 1820s, including the Carlist rebels in Spain; the Carbonari societies in France and Italy; and the Decembrists in Russia. Karl Marx adopted Napoleon's negative sense of the term, using it in his writings, in which he once described Tracy as a fischblütige Bourgeoisdoktrinär (a 'fish-blooded bourgeois doctrinaire').[7]

The term has since dropped some of its pejorative sting, and has become a neutral term in the analysis of differing political opinions and views of social groups.[8] While Marx situated the term within class struggle and domination,[9][10] others believed it was a necessary part of institutional functioning and social integration.[11]

Definitions and analysis Edit

There are many different kinds of ideologies, including political, social, epistemological, and ethical.

Recent analysis tends to posit that ideology is a 'coherent system of ideas' that rely on a few basic assumptions about reality that may or may not have any factual basis. Through this system, ideas become coherent, repeated patterns through the subjective ongoing choices that people make. These ideas serve as the seed around which further thought grows. The belief in an ideology can range from passive acceptance up to fervent advocacy. According to most recent analysis, ideologies are neither necessarily right nor wrong.

Definitions, such as by Manfred Steger and Paul James emphasize both the issue of patterning and contingent claims to truth:[12]

Ideologies are patterned clusters of normatively imbued ideas and concepts, including particular representations of power relations. These conceptual maps help people navigate the complexity of their political universe and carry claims to social truth.

Studies of the concept of ideology itself (rather than specific ideologies) have been carried out under the name of systematic ideology in the works of George Walford and Harold Walsby, who attempt to explore the relationships between ideology and social systems.[example needed]

David W. Minar describes six different ways the word ideology has been used:[13]

  1. As a collection of certain ideas with certain kinds of content, usually normative;
  2. As the form or internal logical structure that ideas have within a set;
  3. By the role ideas play in human-social interaction;
  4. By the role ideas play in the structure of an organization;
  5. As meaning, whose purpose is persuasion; and
  6. As the locus of social interaction.

For Willard A. Mullins, an ideology should be contrasted with the related (but different) issues of utopia and historical myth. An ideology is composed of four basic characteristics:[14]

  1. it must have power over cognition;
  2. it must be capable of guiding one's evaluations;
  3. it must provide guidance towards action; and
  4. it must be logically coherent.

Terry Eagleton outlines (more or less in no particular order) some definitions of ideology:[15]

  1. The process of production of meanings, signs and values in social life
  2. A body of ideas characteristic of a particular social group or class
  3. Ideas that help legitimate a dominant political power
  4. False ideas that help legitimate a dominant political power
  5. Systematically distorted communication
  6. Ideas that offer a position for a subject
  7. Forms of thought motivated by social interests
  8. Identity thinking
  9. Socially necessary illusion
  10. The conjuncture of discourse and power
  11. The medium in which conscious social actors make sense of their world
  12. Action-oriented sets of beliefs
  13. The confusion of linguistic and phenomenal reality
  14. Semiotic closure[15]: 197 
  15. The indispensable medium in which individuals live out their relations to a social structure
  16. The process that converts social life to a natural reality

German philosopher Christian Duncker called for a "critical reflection of the ideology concept."[16] In his work, he strove to bring the concept of ideology into the foreground, as well as the closely connected concerns of epistemology and history, defining ideology in terms of a system of presentations that explicitly or implicitly claim to absolute truth.

Marxist interpretation Edit

 
Karl Marx posits that a society's dominant ideology is integral to its superstructure.

Marx's analysis sees ideology as a system of falsehoods deliberately promulgated by the ruling class as a means of self-perpetuation.[17]

In the Marxist base and superstructure model of society, base denotes the relations of production and modes of production, and superstructure denotes the dominant ideology (i.e. religious, legal, political systems). The economic base of production determines the political superstructure of a society. Ruling class-interests determine the superstructure and the nature of the justifying ideology—actions feasible because the ruling class control the means of production. For example, in a feudal mode of production, religious ideology is the most prominent aspect of the superstructure, while in capitalist formations, ideologies such as liberalism and social democracy dominate. Hence the great importance of ideology justifies a society and politically confuses the alienated groups of society via false consciousness.

Some explanations have been presented. Antonio Gramsci uses cultural hegemony to explain why the working-class have a false ideological conception of what their best interests are. Marx argued that "The class which has the means of material production at its disposal has control at the same time over the means of mental production."[18]

The Marxist formulation of "ideology as an instrument of social reproduction" is conceptually important to the sociology of knowledge,[19] viz. Karl Mannheim, Daniel Bell, and Jürgen Habermas et al. Moreover, Mannheim has developed, and progressed, from the "total" but "special" Marxist conception of ideology to a "general" and "total" ideological conception acknowledging that all ideology (including Marxism) resulted from social life, an idea developed by the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Slavoj Žižek and the earlier Frankfurt School added to the "general theory" of ideology a psychoanalytic insight that ideologies do not include only conscious, but also unconscious ideas.

Ideological state apparatuses (Althusser) Edit

French Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser proposed that ideology is "the imagined existence (or idea) of things as it relates to the real conditions of existence" and makes use of a lacunar discourse. A number of propositions, which are never untrue, suggest a number of other propositions, which are. In this way, the essence of the lacunar discourse is what is not told (but is suggested).

For example, the statement "All are equal before the law", which is a theoretical groundwork of current legal systems, suggests that all people may be of equal worth or have equal opportunities. This is not true, for the concept of private property and power over the means of production results in some people being able to own more (much more) than others. This power disparity contradicts the claim that all share both practical worth and future opportunity equally; for example, the rich can afford better legal representation, which practically privileges them before the law.

Althusser also proffered the concept of the ideological state apparatus to explain his theory of ideology. His first thesis was "ideology has no history": while individual ideologies have histories, interleaved with the general class struggle of society, the general form of ideology is external to history.

For Althusser, beliefs and ideas are the products of social practices, not the reverse. His thesis that "ideas are material" is illustrated by the "scandalous advice" of Pascal toward unbelievers: "Kneel and pray, and then you will believe." What is ultimately ideological for Althusser are not the subjective beliefs held in the conscious "minds" of human individuals, but rather discourses that produce these beliefs, the material institutions and rituals that individuals take part in without submitting it to conscious examination and so much more critical thinking.

Ideology and the Commodity (Debord) Edit

The French Marxist theorist Guy Debord, founding member of the Situationist International, argued that when the commodity becomes the "essential category" of society, i.e. when the process of commodification has been consummated to its fullest extent, the image of society propagated by the commodity (as it describes all of life as constituted by notions and objects deriving their value only as commodities tradeable in terms of exchange value), colonizes all of life and reduces society to a mere representation, The Society of the Spectacle.[20]

Unifying agents (Hoffer) Edit

The American philosopher Eric Hoffer identified several elements that unify followers of a particular ideology:[21]

  1. Hatred: "Mass movements can rise and spread without a God, but never without belief in a devil."[21] The "ideal devil" is a foreigner.[21]: 93 
  2. Imitation: "The less satisfaction we derive from being ourselves, the greater is our desire to be like others…the more we mistrust our judgment and luck, the more are we ready to follow the example of others."[21]: 101–2 
  3. Persuasion: The proselytizing zeal of propagandists derives from "a passionate search for something not yet found more than a desire to bestow something we already have."[21]: 110 
  4. Coercion: Hoffer asserts that violence and fanaticism are interdependent. People forcibly converted to Islamic or communist beliefs become as fanatical as those who did the forcing. "It takes fanatical faith to rationalize our cowardice."[21]: 107–8 
  5. Leadership: Without the leader, there is no movement. Often the leader must wait long in the wings until the time is ripe. He calls for sacrifices in the present, to justify his vision of a breathtaking future. The skills required include: audacity, brazenness, iron will, fanatical conviction; passionate hatred, cunning, a delight in symbols; ability to inspire blind faith in the masses; and a group of able lieutenants.[21]: 112–4  Charlatanism is indispensable, and the leader often imitates both friend and foe, "a single-minded fashioning after a model." He will not lead followers towards the "promised land," but only "away from their unwanted selves."[21]: 116–9 
  6. Action: Original thoughts are suppressed, and unity encouraged, if the masses are kept occupied through great projects, marches, exploration and industry.[21]: 120–1 
  7. Suspicion: "There is prying and spying, tense watching and a tense awareness of being watched." This pathological mistrust goes unchallenged and encourages conformity, not dissent.[21]: 124 

Ronald Inglehart Edit

Ronald Inglehart of the University of Michigan is author of the World Values Survey, which, since 1980, has mapped social attitudes in 100 countries representing 90% of global population. Results indicate that where people live is likely to closely correlate with their ideological beliefs. In much of Africa, South Asia and the Middle East, people prefer traditional beliefs and are less tolerant of liberal values. Protestant Europe, at the other extreme, adheres more to secular beliefs and liberal values. Alone among high-income countries, the United States is exceptional in its adherence to traditional beliefs, in this case Christianity.

Political ideologies Edit

In social studies, a political ideology is a certain ethical set of ideals, principles, doctrines, myths, or symbols of a social movement, institution, class, or large group that explains how society should work, offering some political and cultural blueprint for a certain social order. Political ideologies are concerned with many different aspects of a society, including (for example): the economy, education, health care, labor law, criminal law, the justice system, the provision of social security and social welfare, trade, the environment, minors, immigration, race, use of the military, patriotism, and established religion.

Political ideologies have two dimensions:

  1. Goals: how society should work; and
  2. Methods: the most appropriate ways to achieve the ideal arrangement.

There are many proposed methods for the classification of political ideologies, each of these different methods generate a specific political spectrum.[citation needed] Ideologies also identify themselves by their position on the spectrum (e.g. the left, the center or the right), though precision in this respect can often become controversial. Finally, ideologies can be distinguished from political strategies (e.g., populism) and from single issues that a party may be built around (e.g. legalization of marijuana). Philosopher Michael Oakeshott defines such ideology as "the formalized abridgment of the supposed sub-stratum of the rational truth contained in the tradition." Moreover, Charles Blattberg offers an account that distinguishes political ideologies from political philosophies.[22]

A political ideology largely concerns itself with how to allocate power and to what ends power should be used. Some parties follow a certain ideology very closely, while others may take broad inspiration from a group of related ideologies without specifically embracing any one of them. Each political ideology contains certain ideas on what it considers the best form of government (e.g., democracy, demagogy, theocracy, caliphate etc.), scope of government (e.g. authoritarianism, libertarianism, federalism, etc.) and the best economic system (e.g. capitalism, socialism, etc.). Sometimes the same word is used to identify both an ideology and one of its main ideas. For instance, socialism may refer to an economic system, or it may refer to an ideology that supports that economic system.

Post 1991, many commentators claim that we are living in a post-ideological age,[23] in which redemptive, all-encompassing ideologies have failed. This view is often associated with Francis Fukuyama's writings on the end of history.[24] Contrastly, Nienhueser (2011) sees research (in the field of human resource management) as ongoingly "generating ideology."[25]

Slavoj Zizek has pointed out how the very notion of post-ideology can enable the deepest, blindest form of ideology. A sort of false consciousness or false cynicism, engaged in for the purpose of lending one's point of view the respect of being objective, pretending neutral cynicism, without truly being so. Rather than help avoiding ideology, this lapse only deepens the commitment to an existing one. Zizek calls this "a post-modernist trap."[26] Peter Sloterdijk advanced the same idea already in 1988.[27]

Studies have shown that political ideology is somewhat genetically heritable.[28][29][30][31][32][33][34]

Ideocracy Edit

When a political ideology becomes a dominantly pervasive component within a government, one can speak of an ideocracy.[35] Different forms of government use ideology in various ways, not always restricted to politics and society. Certain ideas and schools of thought become favored, or rejected, over others, depending on their compatibility with or use for the reigning social order.

John Maynard Keynes said, "Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back."[36]

In The Anatomy of Revolution, Crane Brinton said that new ideology spreads when there is discontent with an old regime.[37] The may be repeated during revolutions itself; extremists such as Lenin and Robespierre may thus overcome more moderate revolutionaries.[38] This stage is soon followed by Thermidor, a reining back of revolutionary enthusiasm under pragmatists like Stalin and Napoleon Bonaparte, who bring "normalcy and equilibrium."[39] Brinton's sequence ("men of ideas>fanatics>practical men of action") is reiterated by J. William Fulbright,[40] while a similar form occurs in Eric Hoffer's The True Believer.[41] The revolution thus becomes established as an ideocracy, though its rise is likely to be checked by a 'political midlife crisis.'

Epistemological ideologies Edit

Even when the challenging of existing beliefs is encouraged, as in scientific theories, the dominant paradigm or mindset can prevent certain challenges, theories, or experiments from being advanced.

A special case of science that has inspired ideology is ecology, which studies the relationships among living things on Earth. Perceptual psychologist James J. Gibson believed that human perception of ecological relationships was the basis of self-awareness and cognition itself.[42] Linguist George Lakoff has proposed a cognitive science of mathematics wherein even the most fundamental ideas of arithmetic would be seen as consequences or products of human perception—which is itself necessarily evolved within an ecology.[43]

Deep ecology and the modern ecology movement (and, to a lesser degree, Green parties) appear to have adopted ecological sciences as a positive ideology.[44]

Some notable economically based ideologies include neoliberalism, monetarism, mercantilism, mixed economy, social Darwinism, communism, laissez-faire economics, and free trade. There are also current theories of safe trade and fair trade that can be seen as ideologies.

Psychological explanations of ideology Edit

A large amount of research in psychology is concerned with the causes, consequences and content of ideology, [45][46][47] with humans being dubbed the "ideological animal" by Althusser.[48]: 269  Many theories have tried to explain the existence of ideology in human societies.[48]: 269 

Jost, Ledgerwood and Hardin (2008) propose that ideologies may function as prepackaged units of interpretation that spread because of basic human motives to understand the world, avoid existential threat, and maintain valued interpersonal relationships.[49] The authors conclude that such motives may lead disproportionately to the adoption of system-justifying worldviews.[50] Psychologists generally agree that personality traits, individual difference variables, needs, and ideological beliefs seem to have something in common.[50]

Just-world theory posits that people want to believe in a fair world for a sense of control and security and generate ideologies in order to maintain this belief, for example by justifiying inequality or unfortunate events. A critique of just world theory as a sole explanation of ideology is that it does not explain the differences between ideologies.[48]: 270-271 

Terror management theory posits that ideology is used as a defence mechanism against threats to their worldview which in turn protect and individuals sense of self-esteem and reduce their awareness of mortality. Evidence shows that priming individuals with an awareness of mortality does not cause individuals to respond in ways underpinned by any particular ideology, but rather the ideology that they are currently aware of.[48]: 271 

System Justification Theory posits that people tend to defend and existing society, even at times against their interest, which in turn causes people to create ideoligcal explanations to justify the status quo. Jost, Fitzimmons and Kay argue that the motivation to protect a preexisting system is due to a desire for cognitive consistency (being able to think in similar ways over time), reducing uncertainty and reducing effort, illusion of control and fear of equality.[48]: 272  According to system justification theory,[49] ideologies reflect (unconscious) motivational processes, as opposed to the view that political convictions always reflect independent and unbiased thinking.[49]

Ideology and the social sciences Edit

Semiotic theory Edit

According to semiotician Bob Hodge:[51]

[Ideology] identifies a unitary object that incorporates complex sets of meanings with the social agents and processes that produced them. No other term captures this object as well as 'ideology'. Foucault's 'episteme' is too narrow and abstract, not social enough. His 'discourse', popular because it covers some of ideology's terrain with less baggage, is too confined to verbal systems. 'Worldview' is too metaphysical, 'propaganda' too loaded. Despite or because of its contradictions, 'ideology' still plays a key role in semiotics oriented to social, political life.

Authors such as Michael Freeden have also recently incorporated a semantic analysis to the study of ideologies.

Sociology Edit

Sociologists define ideology as "cultural beliefs that justify particular social arrangements, including patterns of inequality."[52] Dominant groups use these sets of cultural beliefs and practices to justify the systems of inequality that maintain their group's social power over non-dominant groups. Ideologies use a society's symbol system to organize social relations in a hierarchy, with some social identities being superior to other social identities, which are considered inferior. The dominant ideology in a society is passed along through the society's major social institutions, such as the media, the family, education, and religion.[53] As societies changed throughout history, so did the ideologies that justified systems of inequality.[52]

Sociological examples of ideologies include: racism; sexism; heterosexism; ableism; and ethnocentrism.[53]

Quotations Edit

  • "We do not need…to believe in an ideology. All that is necessary is for each of us to develop our good human qualities. The need for a sense of universal responsibility affects every aspect of modern life." — Dalai Lama.[54]
  • "The function of ideology is to stabilize and perpetuate dominance through masking or illusion." — Sally Haslanger[55]
  • "[A]n ideology differs from a simple opinion in that it claims to possess either the key to history, or the solution for all the ‘riddles of the universe,’ or the intimate knowledge of the hidden universal laws, which are supposed to rule nature and man." — Hannah Arendt[56]

See also Edit

References Edit

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  54. ^ Bunson, Matthew, ed. 1997. The Dalai Lama's Book of Wisdom. Ebury Press. p. 180.
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  56. ^ Arendt, Hannah. 1968. The Origins of Totalitarianism. Harcourt. p. 159.

Bibliography Edit

External links Edit

  • The Pervert's Guide to Ideology: How Ideology Seduces Us – and How We Can (Try to) Escape It
  • Ideology Study Guide
  • Louis Althusser's "Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses"

ideology, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, 2020, ideology, beliefs, philosophies, attributed, person, group, persons, especially, . This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2020 An ideology is a set of beliefs or philosophies attributed to a person or group of persons especially those held for reasons that are not purely epistemic 1 2 in which practical elements are as prominent as theoretical ones 3 Formerly applied primarily to economic political or religious theories and policies in a tradition going back to Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels more recent use treats the term as mainly condemnatory 4 The term was coined by Antoine Destutt de Tracy a French Enlightenment aristocrat and philosopher who conceived it in 1796 as the science of ideas to develop a rational system of ideas to oppose the irrational impulses of the mob In political science the term is used in a descriptive sense to refer to political belief systems 4 Contents 1 Etymology and history 2 Definitions and analysis 2 1 Marxist interpretation 2 2 Ideological state apparatuses Althusser 2 3 Ideology and the Commodity Debord 2 4 Unifying agents Hoffer 2 5 Ronald Inglehart 3 Political ideologies 3 1 Ideocracy 4 Epistemological ideologies 5 Psychological explanations of ideology 6 Ideology and the social sciences 6 1 Semiotic theory 6 2 Sociology 7 Quotations 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymology and history Edit nbsp Antoine Destutt de Tracy 1754 1836 The term ideology originates from French ideologie itself deriving from combining Greek idea ἰdea notion pattern close to the Lockean sense of idea and logia logῐ ᾱ the study of The term ideology and the system of ideas associated with it was coined in 1796 by Antoine Destutt de Tracy while in prison pending trial during the Reign of Terror where he read the works of Locke and Condillac 5 Hoping to form a secure foundation for the moral and political sciences Tracy devised the term for a science of ideas basing such upon two things the sensations that people experience as they interact with the material world and the ideas that form in their minds due to those sensations He conceived ideology as a liberal philosophy that would defend individual liberty property free markets and constitutional limits on state power He argues that among these aspects ideology is the most generic term because the science of ideas also contains the study of their expression and deduction 6 The coup that overthrew Maximilien Robespierre allowed Tracy to pursue his work 6 Tracy reacted to the terroristic phase of the revolution during the Napoleonic regime by trying to work out a rational system of ideas to oppose the irrational mob impulses that had nearly destroyed him A subsequent early source for the near original meaning of ideology is Hippolyte Taine s work on the Ancien Regime Origins of Contemporary France I He describes ideology as rather like teaching philosophy via the Socratic method though without extending the vocabulary beyond what the general reader already possessed and without the examples from observation that practical science would require Taine identifies it not just with Destutt De Tracy but also with his milieu and includes Condillac as one of its precursors Napoleon Bonaparte came to view ideology as a term of abuse which he often hurled against his liberal foes in Tracy s Institutional According to Karl Mannheim s historical reconstruction of the shifts in the meaning of ideology the modern meaning of the word was born when Napoleon used it to describe his opponents as the ideologues Tracy s major book The Elements of Ideology was soon translated into the major languages of Europe In the century following Tracy the term ideology moved back and forth between positive and negative connotations During this next generation when post Napoleonic governments adopted a reactionary stance influenced the Italian Spanish and Russian thinkers who had begun to describe themselves as liberals and who attempted to reignite revolutionary activity in the early 1820s including the Carlist rebels in Spain the Carbonari societies in France and Italy and the Decembrists in Russia Karl Marx adopted Napoleon s negative sense of the term using it in his writings in which he once described Tracy as a fischblutige Bourgeoisdoktrinar a fish blooded bourgeois doctrinaire 7 The term has since dropped some of its pejorative sting and has become a neutral term in the analysis of differing political opinions and views of social groups 8 While Marx situated the term within class struggle and domination 9 10 others believed it was a necessary part of institutional functioning and social integration 11 Definitions and analysis EditThere are many different kinds of ideologies including political social epistemological and ethical Recent analysis tends to posit that ideology is a coherent system of ideas that rely on a few basic assumptions about reality that may or may not have any factual basis Through this system ideas become coherent repeated patterns through the subjective ongoing choices that people make These ideas serve as the seed around which further thought grows The belief in an ideology can range from passive acceptance up to fervent advocacy According to most recent analysis ideologies are neither necessarily right nor wrong Definitions such as by Manfred Steger and Paul James emphasize both the issue of patterning and contingent claims to truth 12 Ideologies are patterned clusters of normatively imbued ideas and concepts including particular representations of power relations These conceptual maps help people navigate the complexity of their political universe and carry claims to social truth Studies of the concept of ideology itself rather than specific ideologies have been carried out under the name of systematic ideology in the works of George Walford and Harold Walsby who attempt to explore the relationships between ideology and social systems example needed David W Minar describes six different ways the word ideology has been used 13 As a collection of certain ideas with certain kinds of content usually normative As the form or internal logical structure that ideas have within a set By the role ideas play in human social interaction By the role ideas play in the structure of an organization As meaning whose purpose is persuasion and As the locus of social interaction For Willard A Mullins an ideology should be contrasted with the related but different issues of utopia and historical myth An ideology is composed of four basic characteristics 14 it must have power over cognition it must be capable of guiding one s evaluations it must provide guidance towards action and it must be logically coherent Terry Eagleton outlines more or less in no particular order some definitions of ideology 15 The process of production of meanings signs and values in social life A body of ideas characteristic of a particular social group or class Ideas that help legitimate a dominant political power False ideas that help legitimate a dominant political power Systematically distorted communication Ideas that offer a position for a subject Forms of thought motivated by social interests Identity thinking Socially necessary illusion The conjuncture of discourse and power The medium in which conscious social actors make sense of their world Action oriented sets of beliefs The confusion of linguistic and phenomenal reality Semiotic closure 15 197 The indispensable medium in which individuals live out their relations to a social structure The process that converts social life to a natural realityGerman philosopher Christian Duncker called for a critical reflection of the ideology concept 16 In his work he strove to bring the concept of ideology into the foreground as well as the closely connected concerns of epistemology and history defining ideology in terms of a system of presentations that explicitly or implicitly claim to absolute truth Marxist interpretation Edit nbsp Karl Marx posits that a society s dominant ideology is integral to its superstructure Marx s analysis sees ideology as a system of falsehoods deliberately promulgated by the ruling class as a means of self perpetuation 17 In the Marxist base and superstructure model of society base denotes the relations of production and modes of production and superstructure denotes the dominant ideology i e religious legal political systems The economic base of production determines the political superstructure of a society Ruling class interests determine the superstructure and the nature of the justifying ideology actions feasible because the ruling class control the means of production For example in a feudal mode of production religious ideology is the most prominent aspect of the superstructure while in capitalist formations ideologies such as liberalism and social democracy dominate Hence the great importance of ideology justifies a society and politically confuses the alienated groups of society via false consciousness Some explanations have been presented Antonio Gramsci uses cultural hegemony to explain why the working class have a false ideological conception of what their best interests are Marx argued that The class which has the means of material production at its disposal has control at the same time over the means of mental production 18 The Marxist formulation of ideology as an instrument of social reproduction is conceptually important to the sociology of knowledge 19 viz Karl Mannheim Daniel Bell and Jurgen Habermas et al Moreover Mannheim has developed and progressed from the total but special Marxist conception of ideology to a general and total ideological conception acknowledging that all ideology including Marxism resulted from social life an idea developed by the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu Slavoj Zizek and the earlier Frankfurt School added to the general theory of ideology a psychoanalytic insight that ideologies do not include only conscious but also unconscious ideas Ideological state apparatuses Althusser Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message French Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser proposed that ideology is the imagined existence or idea of things as it relates to the real conditions of existence and makes use of a lacunar discourse A number of propositions which are never untrue suggest a number of other propositions which are In this way the essence of the lacunar discourse is what is not told but is suggested For example the statement All are equal before the law which is a theoretical groundwork of current legal systems suggests that all people may be of equal worth or have equal opportunities This is not true for the concept of private property and power over the means of production results in some people being able to own more much more than others This power disparity contradicts the claim that all share both practical worth and future opportunity equally for example the rich can afford better legal representation which practically privileges them before the law Althusser also proffered the concept of the ideological state apparatus to explain his theory of ideology His first thesis was ideology has no history while individual ideologies have histories interleaved with the general class struggle of society the general form of ideology is external to history For Althusser beliefs and ideas are the products of social practices not the reverse His thesis that ideas are material is illustrated by the scandalous advice of Pascal toward unbelievers Kneel and pray and then you will believe What is ultimately ideological for Althusser are not the subjective beliefs held in the conscious minds of human individuals but rather discourses that produce these beliefs the material institutions and rituals that individuals take part in without submitting it to conscious examination and so much more critical thinking Ideology and the Commodity Debord Edit The French Marxist theorist Guy Debord founding member of the Situationist International argued that when the commodity becomes the essential category of society i e when the process of commodification has been consummated to its fullest extent the image of society propagated by the commodity as it describes all of life as constituted by notions and objects deriving their value only as commodities tradeable in terms of exchange value colonizes all of life and reduces society to a mere representation The Society of the Spectacle 20 Unifying agents Hoffer Edit The American philosopher Eric Hoffer identified several elements that unify followers of a particular ideology 21 Hatred Mass movements can rise and spread without a God but never without belief in a devil 21 The ideal devil is a foreigner 21 93 Imitation The less satisfaction we derive from being ourselves the greater is our desire to be like others the more we mistrust our judgment and luck the more are we ready to follow the example of others 21 101 2 Persuasion The proselytizing zeal of propagandists derives from a passionate search for something not yet found more than a desire to bestow something we already have 21 110 Coercion Hoffer asserts that violence and fanaticism are interdependent People forcibly converted to Islamic or communist beliefs become as fanatical as those who did the forcing It takes fanatical faith to rationalize our cowardice 21 107 8 Leadership Without the leader there is no movement Often the leader must wait long in the wings until the time is ripe He calls for sacrifices in the present to justify his vision of a breathtaking future The skills required include audacity brazenness iron will fanatical conviction passionate hatred cunning a delight in symbols ability to inspire blind faith in the masses and a group of able lieutenants 21 112 4 Charlatanism is indispensable and the leader often imitates both friend and foe a single minded fashioning after a model He will not lead followers towards the promised land but only away from their unwanted selves 21 116 9 Action Original thoughts are suppressed and unity encouraged if the masses are kept occupied through great projects marches exploration and industry 21 120 1 Suspicion There is prying and spying tense watching and a tense awareness of being watched This pathological mistrust goes unchallenged and encourages conformity not dissent 21 124 Ronald Inglehart Edit Ronald Inglehart of the University of Michigan is author of the World Values Survey which since 1980 has mapped social attitudes in 100 countries representing 90 of global population Results indicate that where people live is likely to closely correlate with their ideological beliefs In much of Africa South Asia and the Middle East people prefer traditional beliefs and are less tolerant of liberal values Protestant Europe at the other extreme adheres more to secular beliefs and liberal values Alone among high income countries the United States is exceptional in its adherence to traditional beliefs in this case Christianity Political ideologies EditSee also List of political ideologies In social studies a political ideology is a certain ethical set of ideals principles doctrines myths or symbols of a social movement institution class or large group that explains how society should work offering some political and cultural blueprint for a certain social order Political ideologies are concerned with many different aspects of a society including for example the economy education health care labor law criminal law the justice system the provision of social security and social welfare trade the environment minors immigration race use of the military patriotism and established religion Political ideologies have two dimensions Goals how society should work and Methods the most appropriate ways to achieve the ideal arrangement There are many proposed methods for the classification of political ideologies each of these different methods generate a specific political spectrum citation needed Ideologies also identify themselves by their position on the spectrum e g the left the center or the right though precision in this respect can often become controversial Finally ideologies can be distinguished from political strategies e g populism and from single issues that a party may be built around e g legalization of marijuana Philosopher Michael Oakeshott defines such ideology as the formalized abridgment of the supposed sub stratum of the rational truth contained in the tradition Moreover Charles Blattberg offers an account that distinguishes political ideologies from political philosophies 22 A political ideology largely concerns itself with how to allocate power and to what ends power should be used Some parties follow a certain ideology very closely while others may take broad inspiration from a group of related ideologies without specifically embracing any one of them Each political ideology contains certain ideas on what it considers the best form of government e g democracy demagogy theocracy caliphate etc scope of government e g authoritarianism libertarianism federalism etc and the best economic system e g capitalism socialism etc Sometimes the same word is used to identify both an ideology and one of its main ideas For instance socialism may refer to an economic system or it may refer to an ideology that supports that economic system Post 1991 many commentators claim that we are living in a post ideological age 23 in which redemptive all encompassing ideologies have failed This view is often associated with Francis Fukuyama s writings on the end of history 24 Contrastly Nienhueser 2011 sees research in the field of human resource management as ongoingly generating ideology 25 Slavoj Zizek has pointed out how the very notion of post ideology can enable the deepest blindest form of ideology A sort of false consciousness or false cynicism engaged in for the purpose of lending one s point of view the respect of being objective pretending neutral cynicism without truly being so Rather than help avoiding ideology this lapse only deepens the commitment to an existing one Zizek calls this a post modernist trap 26 Peter Sloterdijk advanced the same idea already in 1988 27 Studies have shown that political ideology is somewhat genetically heritable 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Ideocracy Edit Main article Ideocracy When a political ideology becomes a dominantly pervasive component within a government one can speak of an ideocracy 35 Different forms of government use ideology in various ways not always restricted to politics and society Certain ideas and schools of thought become favored or rejected over others depending on their compatibility with or use for the reigning social order John Maynard Keynes said Madmen in authority who hear voices in the air are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back 36 In The Anatomy of Revolution Crane Brinton said that new ideology spreads when there is discontent with an old regime 37 The may be repeated during revolutions itself extremists such as Lenin and Robespierre may thus overcome more moderate revolutionaries 38 This stage is soon followed by Thermidor a reining back of revolutionary enthusiasm under pragmatists like Stalin and Napoleon Bonaparte who bring normalcy and equilibrium 39 Brinton s sequence men of ideas gt fanatics gt practical men of action is reiterated by J William Fulbright 40 while a similar form occurs in Eric Hoffer s The True Believer 41 The revolution thus becomes established as an ideocracy though its rise is likely to be checked by a political midlife crisis Epistemological ideologies EditEven when the challenging of existing beliefs is encouraged as in scientific theories the dominant paradigm or mindset can prevent certain challenges theories or experiments from being advanced A special case of science that has inspired ideology is ecology which studies the relationships among living things on Earth Perceptual psychologist James J Gibson believed that human perception of ecological relationships was the basis of self awareness and cognition itself 42 Linguist George Lakoff has proposed a cognitive science of mathematics wherein even the most fundamental ideas of arithmetic would be seen as consequences or products of human perception which is itself necessarily evolved within an ecology 43 Deep ecology and the modern ecology movement and to a lesser degree Green parties appear to have adopted ecological sciences as a positive ideology 44 Some notable economically based ideologies include neoliberalism monetarism mercantilism mixed economy social Darwinism communism laissez faire economics and free trade There are also current theories of safe trade and fair trade that can be seen as ideologies Psychological explanations of ideology EditA large amount of research in psychology is concerned with the causes consequences and content of ideology 45 46 47 with humans being dubbed the ideological animal by Althusser 48 269 Many theories have tried to explain the existence of ideology in human societies 48 269 Jost Ledgerwood and Hardin 2008 propose that ideologies may function as prepackaged units of interpretation that spread because of basic human motives to understand the world avoid existential threat and maintain valued interpersonal relationships 49 The authors conclude that such motives may lead disproportionately to the adoption of system justifying worldviews 50 Psychologists generally agree that personality traits individual difference variables needs and ideological beliefs seem to have something in common 50 Just world theory posits that people want to believe in a fair world for a sense of control and security and generate ideologies in order to maintain this belief for example by justifiying inequality or unfortunate events A critique of just world theory as a sole explanation of ideology is that it does not explain the differences between ideologies 48 270 271 Terror management theory posits that ideology is used as a defence mechanism against threats to their worldview which in turn protect and individuals sense of self esteem and reduce their awareness of mortality Evidence shows that priming individuals with an awareness of mortality does not cause individuals to respond in ways underpinned by any particular ideology but rather the ideology that they are currently aware of 48 271 System Justification Theory posits that people tend to defend and existing society even at times against their interest which in turn causes people to create ideoligcal explanations to justify the status quo Jost Fitzimmons and Kay argue that the motivation to protect a preexisting system is due to a desire for cognitive consistency being able to think in similar ways over time reducing uncertainty and reducing effort illusion of control and fear of equality 48 272 According to system justification theory 49 ideologies reflect unconscious motivational processes as opposed to the view that political convictions always reflect independent and unbiased thinking 49 Ideology and the social sciences EditSemiotic theory EditAccording to semiotician Bob Hodge 51 Ideology identifies a unitary object that incorporates complex sets of meanings with the social agents and processes that produced them No other term captures this object as well as ideology Foucault s episteme is too narrow and abstract not social enough His discourse popular because it covers some of ideology s terrain with less baggage is too confined to verbal systems Worldview is too metaphysical propaganda too loaded Despite or because of its contradictions ideology still plays a key role in semiotics oriented to social political life Authors such as Michael Freeden have also recently incorporated a semantic analysis to the study of ideologies Sociology Edit Sociologists define ideology as cultural beliefs that justify particular social arrangements including patterns of inequality 52 Dominant groups use these sets of cultural beliefs and practices to justify the systems of inequality that maintain their group s social power over non dominant groups Ideologies use a society s symbol system to organize social relations in a hierarchy with some social identities being superior to other social identities which are considered inferior The dominant ideology in a society is passed along through the society s major social institutions such as the media the family education and religion 53 As societies changed throughout history so did the ideologies that justified systems of inequality 52 Sociological examples of ideologies include racism sexism heterosexism ableism and ethnocentrism 53 Quotations Edit We do not need to believe in an ideology All that is necessary is for each of us to develop our good human qualities The need for a sense of universal responsibility affects every aspect of modern life Dalai Lama 54 The function of ideology is to stabilize and perpetuate dominance through masking or illusion Sally Haslanger 55 A n ideology differs from a simple opinion in that it claims to possess either the key to history or the solution for all the riddles of the universe or the intimate knowledge of the hidden universal laws which are supposed to rule nature and man Hannah Arendt 56 See also EditThe Anatomy of Revolution Capitalism Feminism Hegemony Dogma ism List of communist ideologies List of ideologies named after people Ideocracy Noble lie Politicisation Social criticism Socially constructed reality State collapse State ideology of the Soviet Union The True Believer World Values Survey World viewReferences Edit Honderich Ted 1995 The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford University Press p 392 ISBN 978 0 19 866132 0 ideology Lexico Archived from the original on 2020 02 11 Cranston Maurice 1999 2014 Ideology Archived 2020 06 09 at the Wayback Machine revised Encyclopaedia Britannica a b van Dijk T A 2006 Politics Ideology and Discourse PDF Discourse in Society Archived PDF from the original on 2011 07 08 Retrieved 2019 01 28 Vincent Andrew 2009 Modern Political Ideologies John Wiley amp Sons p 1 ISBN 978 1 4443 1105 1 Archived from the original on 3 August 2020 Retrieved 7 May 2020 a b Kennedy Emmet Jul Sep 1979 Ideology from Destutt De Tracy to Marx Journal of the History of Ideas 40 3 353 368 doi 10 2307 2709242 JSTOR 2709242 de Tracy Antoine Destutt 1801 1817 Les Elements d ideologie 3rd ed p 4 as cited in Mannheim Karl 1929 The problem of false consciousness In Ideologie und Utopie 2nd footnote Eagleton Terry 1991 Ideology An introduction Verso p 2 Tucker Robert C 1978 The Marx Engels Reader W W Norton amp Company p 3 Marx MER p 154 Susan Silbey Ideology Archived 2021 06 01 at the Wayback Machine at Cambridge Dictionary of Sociology James Paul and Manfred Steger 2010 Globalization and Culture Vol 4 Ideologies of Globalism Archived 2020 04 29 at the Wayback Machine London Sage Minar David W 1961 Ideology and Political Behavior Midwest Journal of Political Science 5 4 317 31 doi 10 2307 2108991 JSTOR 2108991 Mullins Willard A 1972 On the Concept of Ideology in Political Science American Political Science Review 66 2 498 510 doi 10 2307 1957794 a b Eagleton Terry 1991 Ideology An Introduction Archived 2021 06 01 at the Wayback Machine Verso ISBN 0 86091 319 8 Christian Duncker in German Ideologie Forschung 2006 Rejai Mostafa 1991 Chapter 1 Comparative Analysis of Political Ideologies Political Ideologies A Comparative Approach M E Sharpe p 13 ISBN 0 87332 807 8 Marx Karl 1978a The Civil War in France The Marx Engels Reader 2nd ed New York W W Norton amp Company In this discipline there are lexical disputes over the meaning of the word ideology false consciousness as advocated by Marx or rather false position of a statement in itself is correct but irrelevant in the context in which it is produced as in Max Weber s opinion Buonomo Giampiero 2005 Eleggibilita piu ampia senza i paletti del peculato d uso Un occasione perduta per affrontare il tema delle leggi ad personam Diritto amp Giustizia Edizione Online Archived from the original on 2016 03 24 dead link Guy Debord 1995 The Society of the Spectacle Zone Books a b c d e f g h i j Hoffer Eric 1951 The True Believer Harper Perennial p 91 et seq Blattberg Charles 2001 2009 Political Philosophies and Political Ideologies PDF Archived 2021 06 01 at the Wayback Machine Public Affairs Quarterly 15 3 193 217 SSRN 1755117 Bell D 2000 The End of Ideology On the Exhaustion of Political Ideas in the Fifties 2nd ed Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 393 Fukuyama Francis 1992 The End of History and the Last Man New York Free Press p xi Nienhueser Werner 2011 Empirical Research on Human Resource Management as a Production of Ideology Management Revue 22 4 367 393 doi 10 5771 0935 9915 2011 4 367 ISSN 0935 9915 current empirical research in HRM is generating ideology Zizek Slavoj 2008 The Sublime Object of Ideology 2nd ed London Verso pp xxxi 25 27 ISBN 978 1 84467 300 1 Sloterdijk Peter 1988 Critique of Cynical Reason University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 1586 5 Bouchard Thomas J and Matt McGue 2003 Genetic and environmental influences on human psychological differences ePDF Archived 2020 07 23 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Neurobiology 54 1 44 45 doi 10 1002 neu 10160 PMID 12486697 Cloninger et al 1993 Eaves L J and H J Eysenck 1974 Genetics and the development of social attitudes Archived 2017 03 27 at the Wayback Machine Nature 249 288 89 doi 10 1038 249288a0 Alford John Carolyn Funk and John R Hibbing 2005 Are Political Orientations Genetically Transmitted Archived 2017 08 09 at the Wayback Machine American Political Science Review 99 2 153 167 Hatemi Peter K Sarah E Medland Katherine I Morley Andrew C Heath and Nicholas G Martin 2007 The genetics of voting An Australian twin study Archived 2008 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Behavior Genetics 37 3 435 448 doi 10 1007 s10519 006 9138 8 Hatemi Peter K J Hibbing J Alford N Martin and L Eaves 2009 Is there a party in your genes Archived 2021 06 01 at the Wayback Machine Political Research Quarterly 62 3 584 600 doi 10 1177 1065912908327606 SSRN 1276482 Settle Jaime E Christopher T Dawes and James H Fowler 2009 The heritability of partisan attachment Archived 2010 06 16 at the Wayback Machine Political Research Quarterly 62 3 601 13 doi 10 1177 1065912908327607 Piekalkiewicz Jaroslaw Penn Alfred Wayne 1995 Jaroslaw Piekalkiewicz Alfred Wayne Penn Politics of Ideocracy State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 2297 7 Archived from the original on 2021 04 13 Retrieved 2020 08 27 Keynes John Maynard The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money pp 383 84 Brinton Crane 1938 Chapter 2 The Anatomy of Revolution Brinton Crane 1938 Chapter 6 The Anatomy of Revolution Brinton Crane 1938 Chapter 8 The Anatomy of Revolution Fulbright J William 1967 The Arrogance of Power ch 3 7 Hoffer Eric 1951 The True Believer ch 15 17 Gibson James J 1979 The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception Taylor amp Francis Lakoff George 2000 Where Mathematics Comes From How the Embodied Mind Brings Mathematics Into Being Basic Books Madsen Peter Deep Ecology Britannica Archived from the original on 2021 04 13 Retrieved 2021 04 10 Jost John T Federico Christopher M Napier Jaime L January 2009 Political Ideology Its Structure Functions and Elective Affinities Annual Review of Psychology 60 1 307 337 doi 10 1146 annurev psych 60 110707 163600 PMID 19035826 Schlenker Barry R Chambers John R Le Bonnie M April 2012 Conservatives are happier than liberals but why Political ideology personality and life satisfaction Journal of Research in Personality 46 2 127 146 doi 10 1016 j jrp 2011 12 009 Saucier Gerard 2000 Isms and the structure of social attitudes Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 78 2 366 385 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 78 2 366 PMID 10707341 a b c d e Greenberg Jeff Koole Sander Leon Pyszczynski Thomas A 2004 Handbook of experimental existential psychology New York Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 59385 040 1 a b c Jost John T Alison Ledgerwood and Curtis D Hardin 2008 Shared reality system justification and the relational basis of ideological beliefs pp 171 186 in Social and Personality Psychology Compass 2 a b Lee S Dimin 2011 Corporatocracy A Revolution in Progress p 140 Hodge Bob Ideology Archived 2008 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Semiotics Encyclopedia Online Retrieved 12 June 2020 a b Macionis John J 2010 Sociology 13th ed Upper Saddle River N J Pearson Education p 257 ISBN 978 0 205 74989 8 OCLC 468109511 a b Witt Jon 2017 SOC 2018 5th ed S l McGraw Hill p 65 ISBN 978 1 259 70272 3 OCLC 968304061 Bunson Matthew ed 1997 The Dalai Lama s Book of Wisdom Ebury Press p 180 Haslanger Sally 2017 I Culture and Critique Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 91 149 73 doi 10 1093 arisup akx001 Arendt Hannah 1968 The Origins of Totalitarianism Harcourt p 159 Bibliography Edit Althusser Louis 1970 1971 Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses In Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays Monthly Review Press ISBN 1 58367 039 4 Belloni Claudio 2013 Per la critica dell ideologia Filosofia e storia in Marx Milan Mimesis Debord Guy 1967 The Society of the Spectacle Bureau of Public Secrets 2014 Annotated Edition Duncker Christian 2006 Kritische Reflexionen Des Ideologiebegriffes ISBN 1 903343 88 7 ed 2008 Ideologiekritik Aktuell Ideologies Today 1 London ISBN 978 1 84790 015 9 Eagleton Terry 1991 Ideology An Introduction Verso ISBN 0 86091 319 8 Ellul Jacques 1965 1973 Propaganda The Formation of Men s Attitudes translated by K Kellen and J Lerner New York Random House Freeden Michael 1996 Ideologies and Political Theory A Conceptual Approach Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 829414 6 Feuer Lewis S 2010 Ideology and Ideologists Piscataway NJ Transaction Publishers Gries Peter Hays 2014 The Politics of American Foreign Policy How Ideology Divides Liberals and Conservatives over Foreign Affairs Stanford Stanford University Press Haas Mark L 2005 The Ideological Origins of Great Power Politics 1789 1989 Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 7407 8 Hawkes David 2003 Ideology 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 0 415 29012 0 James Paul and Manfred Steger 2010 Globalization and Culture Vol 4 Ideologies of Globalism London Sage Lukacs Georg 1967 1919 1923 History and Class Consciousness translated by R Livingstone Merlin Press Malesevic Sinisa and Iain Mackenzie eds Ideology after Poststructuralism London Pluto Press Mannheim Karl 1936 Ideology and Utopia Routledge Marx Karl 1845 46 1932 The German Ideology Minogue Kenneth 1985 Alien Powers The Pure Theory of Ideology Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 312 01860 6 Minar David W 1961 Ideology and Political Behavior Midwest Journal of Political Science 5 4 317 331 doi 10 2307 2108991 JSTOR 2108991 Mullins Willard A 1972 On the Concept of Ideology in Political Science American Political Science Review 66 2 498 510 doi 10 2307 1957794 Owen John 2011 The Clash of Ideas in World Politics Transnational Networks States and Regime Change 1510 2010 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 14239 4 Pinker Steven 2002 The Blank Slate The Modern Denial of Human Nature New York Penguin Group ISBN 0 670 03151 8 Sorce Keller Marcello de fr it 2007 Why is Music so Ideological Why Do Totalitarian States Take It So Seriously A Personal View from History and the Social Sciences Journal of Musicological Research 26 2 3 91 122 Steger Manfred B and Paul James 2013 Levels of Subjective Globalization Ideologies Imaginaries Ontologies Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 12 1 2 17 40 doi 10 1163 15691497 12341240 Verschueren Jef nl 2012 Ideology in Language Use Pragmatic Guidelines for Empirical Research Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 69590 0 Zizek Slavoj 1989 The Sublime Object of Ideology Verso ISBN 0 86091 971 4 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ideology nbsp Look up ideology in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Pervert s Guide to Ideology How Ideology Seduces Us and How We Can Try to Escape It Ideology Study Guide Louis Althusser s Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ideology amp oldid 1179233516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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