In search of the elusive essence: Heuristics in the essentialization process

Authors

  • Alexiοs Arvanitis University of Crete
  • Alexandra Hantzi Panteion University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26248/eleutherna.v8i0.85

Keywords:

essentialism, illusory correlation, prejudice, heuristics, biases

Abstract

Drawing mostly from the field of cognitive psychology we treat essentialism as a bias under which social categories are perceived as having an underlying “hidden” cause feature.  Study 1 shows how social categories can be separated into essentialized and nonessentialized according to inability to explain the core characteristics of the categories.  Study 2 provides a link between inability to explain the core characteristics of the category and a general illusory correlational procedure that links the category to its characteristics.  Study 3 links essentialism to a justice heuristic that leads to the naturalization of differences among categories.  Based on the findings, an account of the cognitive process of essentialization is discussed, as a process that arguably starts from an inability to explain core characteristics of a category, builds on illusory correlation between the category and its characteristics and establishes the naturalization of differences among categories.

Author Biographies

Alexiοs Arvanitis, University of Crete

Adjunct Professor, Dept. Psychology, School of Social Sciences, University of Crete

Alexandra Hantzi, Panteion University

Professor of Social Psychology, Dept. Psychology, Panteion University

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Published

2017-12-20

How to Cite

Arvanitis, A., & Hantzi, A. (2017). In search of the elusive essence: Heuristics in the essentialization process. ELEUTHERNA, 8, 55–80. https://doi.org/10.26248/eleutherna.v8i0.85