When History Seems to Repeat Itself: Exposure to Perceived Lessons of the Past Influences Predictions About Current Political Events

IF 2.7 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychologica Belgica Pub Date : 2022-03-16 DOI:10.5334/pb.1075
Djouaria Ghilani, O. Luminet, O. Klein
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Abstract

The idea that the past holds lessons for the present, under the guise of historical analogies, is prevalent in political and public discourse. Those analogies are often accompanied by dire warnings befalling those who “forget” or otherwise neglect the powerful lessons of History—and would then be “doomed to repeat it”, as the saying goes. So, Would remembering history make it seem more OR LESS likely to repeat itself in the future? In other words, does exposure to specific lessons about past events, especially ones involving causal claims, affect how people expect real-life events to turn out? Four studies (three preregistered) tested this experimentally. In Studies 1 and 2, participants expected the same behavior (the US adopting a harsh stance against Iran in the Nuclear Treaty) to result in a more negative outcome when this current stance seemed to match a “lesson” they had read about the break-out of World War II (European leaders adopting a harsh approach against Germany in the 1919 Versailles Treaty vs. a conciliatory approach in the 1938 Munich Agreement). Studies 3 and 4 attempted to eliminate some confounds present in the first two studies and to generalize the effect to different events. While results varied across studies, an internal meta-analysis indicated that the analogical effect on predictions (d = –.08) tended to become stronger as participants’ knowledge about the target situation decreased (d-1SD = –.24). These findings support the possibility of analogical-based predictive effects for real-life political events, and are discussed in light of their research and political implications.
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当历史似乎在重演:对过去经验教训的暴露影响对当前政治事件的预测
在历史类比的幌子下,过去为现在提供教训的想法在政治和公共话语中很流行。这些类比往往伴随着可怕的警告,降临到那些“忘记”或以其他方式忽视历史教训的人身上,然后就像俗话说的那样,“注定要重蹈覆辙”。那么,记住历史会让它在未来更有可能重演吗?换句话说,接触有关过去事件的特定课程,特别是涉及因果关系的课程,会影响人们对现实生活中事件的预期结果吗?四项研究(其中三项是预先注册的)通过实验验证了这一点。在研究1和研究2中,参与者预期同样的行为(美国在《核条约》中对伊朗采取严厉立场)会导致更负面的结果,而当前的立场似乎与他们在第二次世界大战爆发时读到的“教训”相符(欧洲领导人在1919年的《凡尔赛条约》中对德国采取严厉态度,而在1938年的《慕尼黑协定》中采取和解态度)。研究3和4试图消除前两项研究中出现的一些混淆,并将效果推广到不同的事件。虽然不同研究的结果不同,但内部荟萃分析表明,随着参与者对目标情况的了解减少,对预测的类比效应(d = - 0.08)趋于增强(d- 1sd = - 0.24)。这些发现支持了基于类比的预测现实政治事件的可能性,并根据其研究和政治含义进行了讨论。
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来源期刊
Psychologica Belgica
Psychologica Belgica PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.00%
发文量
22
审稿时长
4 weeks
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