Skip to main content

LIDAM Economics Seminar - Joel Van der Weele

lidam
Louvain-la-Neuve
More information

05/03/2026 - 12:45 - Doyen 22

Joel Van der Weele

(University of Amsterdam)

will give a presentation on 

Rationalizations and Political Polarization

Abstract 

We present a self- and social-signaling model formalizing findings in political psychology that moral and political judgments stem primarily from intuition and emotion, while reasoning serves to rationalize these intuitions to maintain an image of impartiality. In social interactions, agents’ rationalizations are strategic complements: others’ rationalizations weaken their ability to judge critically and make their actions less revealing of (inconvenient) truths. When agents are naive about their own rationalizations, our model predicts ideological and affective polarization, with each side assigning inappropriate motives to the other. Cross-partisan exchanges of narratives reduce polarization but are avoided by the agents. In within-group ex- changes agents favor skilled speakers, whose narratives worsen polarization. Our model explains partisan disagreements over policy consequences, aligns with empirical polarization trends, and offers insights into efforts to disrupt echo chambers.

More information about the speaker

  • Thursday, 05 March 2026, 12h45
    Thursday, 05 March 2026, 14h00
  • Prof. Joseph Gomes