ABSTRACT

This book examines the human proclivity to resist changing our beliefs. Drawing on psychological, neurological, and philosophical research, and integrating topics as wide ranging as emotion, cognition, social (and physical) context, and learning theory, Lao and Young explore why this resistance to change impedes our learning and progression. They also suggest that failure to adapt our beliefs to available and informed evidence can incur costs that may be seen in personal growth, politics, science, law, medicine, education, and business.

Resistance to Belief Change explores the various manifestations of resistance, including overt, discursive, and especially inertial forms of resistance. As well as the influential factors that can impact upon them, the book also examines how the self-directed learner, as well as teachers, may structure the learning experience to overcome resistance and facilitate progressive and adaptive learning.

Lao and Young find that the impediments to learning and resistance to change are far more prevalent and costly than previously suggested in research, and so this book will be of interest to a range of people in cognitive development, social psychology, and clinical and educational psychology.

chapter 1|17 pages

The Nature of Beliefs

chapter 2|18 pages

Introduction to Resistance

chapter 4|29 pages

Resistance as Disagreement

chapter 5|38 pages

Affective Resistance

chapter 6|24 pages

Cognitive Anchoring

chapter 7|31 pages

Mechanisms of Cognitive Inertia

chapter 8|24 pages

Social Influences on Resistance

chapter 9|25 pages

Biological Resistance

chapter 10|38 pages

Self-Directed Learning

chapter 11|21 pages

Teaching Against Resistance