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Chase Wilson
Training Track: Applied Social
Lab: Attitudes and Social Cognition Lab
Advisor: Victor Ottati, Ph.D.
Office: Coffey Hall LL27
Email: cwilson9@luc.edu
Webpage: LinkedIn
Interests
I am interested in political attitudes, and the lay theories and cognitive styles that contribute to forming these attitudes.
Masters Thesis Title
The perceived threat of secularism and militancy among religious fundamentalists
Masters Thesis Abstract
Religious fundamentalism has been found to predict endorsement of aggressive counterterrorism techniques, such as the use of severe interrogations and pre-emptive military attacks (e.g. Barnes, Brown & Osterman, 2012). The present study tested whether a perceived increase in secularism constitutes a psychological threat to American religious fundamentalists, and thus increases endorsement of such counterterrorism tactics. Replicating previous research, religious fundamentalism was found to positively predict endorsement of aggressive counterterrorism techniques, even when controlling for ideology and party identification. Contrary to hypothesis, the secularism prime had no effect. An unpredicted finding of this study was that religious fundamentalism only related to the counterterrorism attitudes of political experts, not political novices. This moderation via expertise suggests that, rather than having a direct psychological effect (such as out-group aggression), fundamentalism's relationship to such attitudes emerges through the application of political knowledge.
Masters Thesis Committee
Victor C. Ottati and R. Scott Tindale