Papers by Candace Cantrell
Encyclopedia of Critical Psychology, 2014
Nowhere has the critical impulse “overshot its target” as widely as in relation to the concept an... more Nowhere has the critical impulse “overshot its target” as widely as in relation to the concept and activity of justification (Latour, 2002). The truth of this proposition in psychology is evidenced in the ambiguity of language and concepts dealing with the truth of propositions generally: reasons are not always reasonable, but often “rationalizations”; moral justification might as easily be called “moralizing”; and what is “just” can always be countered as just one’s opinion.
A great deal of psychological theory and research focuses on the construction and deconstruction of justifications, with much of this work documenting the ways in which justifications can be self-serving (Wolff & Moser, 2008; Gino & Ariely, 2012), group-serving (Sidanius & Pratto, 1999), or system-serving (Jost & Banaji, 1994; Shepherd & Kay, 2012; Day, Kay, Holmes, & Napier, 2011). The emancipatory potential of critical psychology’s contribution lies not only in critique of ego-justification and social dominance, but in championing the more empathic principles that ground authentic justification and the values of pluralism and inclusivity.
Encyclopedia of Critical Psychology, 2014
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Papers by Candace Cantrell
A great deal of psychological theory and research focuses on the construction and deconstruction of justifications, with much of this work documenting the ways in which justifications can be self-serving (Wolff & Moser, 2008; Gino & Ariely, 2012), group-serving (Sidanius & Pratto, 1999), or system-serving (Jost & Banaji, 1994; Shepherd & Kay, 2012; Day, Kay, Holmes, & Napier, 2011). The emancipatory potential of critical psychology’s contribution lies not only in critique of ego-justification and social dominance, but in championing the more empathic principles that ground authentic justification and the values of pluralism and inclusivity.
A great deal of psychological theory and research focuses on the construction and deconstruction of justifications, with much of this work documenting the ways in which justifications can be self-serving (Wolff & Moser, 2008; Gino & Ariely, 2012), group-serving (Sidanius & Pratto, 1999), or system-serving (Jost & Banaji, 1994; Shepherd & Kay, 2012; Day, Kay, Holmes, & Napier, 2011). The emancipatory potential of critical psychology’s contribution lies not only in critique of ego-justification and social dominance, but in championing the more empathic principles that ground authentic justification and the values of pluralism and inclusivity.