Does Self-Love or Self-Hate Predict Conspiracy Beliefs? Narcissism, Self-Esteem, and the Endorsement of Conspiracy Theories

Author:

Cichocka Aleksandra1,Marchlewska Marta2,de Zavala Agnieszka Golec345

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom

2. Institute for Social Studies, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland

3. Department of Psychology, Goldsmiths, University of London, London, United Kingdom

4. Department of Psychology, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Poznań, Poland

5. Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL)/CIS-IUL, Lisbon, Portugal

Abstract

Across three studies, we examined the role of self-evaluation in predicting conspiracy beliefs. Previous research linked the endorsement of conspiracy theories to low self-esteem. We propose that conspiracy theories should rather be appealing to individuals with exaggerated feelings of self-love, such as narcissists, due to their paranoid tendencies. In Study 1, general conspiracist beliefs were predicted by high individual narcissism but low self-esteem. Study 2 demonstrated that these effects were differentially mediated by paranoid thoughts, and independent of the effects of collective narcissism. Individual narcissism predicted generalized conspiracist beliefs, regardless of the conspiracy theories implicating in-group or out-group members, while collective narcissism predicted belief in out-group but not in-group conspiracies. Study 3 replicated the effects of individual narcissism and self-esteem on the endorsement of various specific conspiracy theories and demonstrated that the negative effect of self-esteem was largely accounted for by the general negativity toward humans associated with low self-esteem.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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