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- Q4726382 subject Q7180628.
- Q4726382 subject Q7216536.
- Q4726382 abstract "In philosophy and psychology, an alief is an automatic or habitual belief-like attitude, particularly one that is in tension with a person’s explicit beliefs.For example, a person standing on a transparent balcony may believe that they are safe, but alieve that they are in danger. A person watching a sad movie may believe that the characters are completely fictional, but their aliefs may lead them to cry nonetheless. A person who is hesitant to eat fudge that has been formed into the shape of feces, or who exhibits reluctance in drinking from a sterilized bedpan may believe that the substances are safe to eat and drink, but may alieve that they are not. And a person who believes in racial equality may nonetheless have aliefs – subtle patterns of response associated with their implicit attitudes – that cause them to treat people of different racial groups in subtly different ways.The term alief was introduced by Tamar Gendler, a professor of philosophy and cognitive science at Yale University, in a pair of influential articles published in 2008. Since the publication of these original articles, the notion of alief has been utilized by Gendler and others—including Paul Bloom and Daniel Dennett—to explain a range of psychological phenomena in addition to those listed above, including the pleasure of stories, the persistence of positive illusions, certain religious beliefs, and certain psychiatric disturbances, such as phobias and obsessive–compulsive disorder.".
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- Q4726382 wikiPageExternalLink 65678.
- Q4726382 wikiPageExternalLink ~tgendler.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q1318295.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q1590549.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q175854.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q178190.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q1940345.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q207783.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q215263.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q34394.
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- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q496.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q5891.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q6007271.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q7180628.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q7216536.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q7233272.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q7680735.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q7867.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q8253.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q8461.
- Q4726382 wikiPageWikiLink Q9418.
- Q4726382 comment "In philosophy and psychology, an alief is an automatic or habitual belief-like attitude, particularly one that is in tension with a person’s explicit beliefs.For example, a person standing on a transparent balcony may believe that they are safe, but alieve that they are in danger. A person watching a sad movie may believe that the characters are completely fictional, but their aliefs may lead them to cry nonetheless.".
- Q4726382 label "Alief (mental state)".