Ideocognitive
Adjective describing the intersection of ideology and cognition—how ideological frameworks shape basic cognitive processes like attention, memory, categorization, and inference. An ideocognitive approach recognizes that what we notice, what we remember, and what we consider relevant are never purely neutral but are filtered through ideological lenses. The term is used to analyze phenomena like selective exposure (seeking confirming information), motivated reasoning (evaluating evidence to reach preferred conclusions), and the persistence of discredited beliefs despite counter-evidence. Ideocognitive processes are not flaws but features of how human minds work in social contexts.
Example: "Her ideocognitive bias meant she remembered every flaw in the opposing argument but forgot the weaknesses in her own—not dishonesty, but ideology shaping memory."
Ideocognitive by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal April 16, 2026
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