Bar-Tal, D. (1990) .Group Beliefs
Bar-Tal, D. (1990) .Group Beliefs
Bar-Tal, D. (1990) .Group Beliefs
Springer
Series in
Social
Psychology
SSSP
Daniel Bar-Tal
Group Beliefs
A Conception for Analyzing Group
Structure, Processes, and Behavior
Daniel Bar-Tal
School of Education
Tel-Aviv University
Tel-Aviv 69978
Israel
9 876 54 32 I
ISBN-13:978-1-4612-7956-3
DOl: 10.1007/978-1-4612-3298-8
e-ISBN-13:978-1-4612-3298-8
Preface
The work on group beliefs stems from my interest in the formation of social
knowledge by individuals and groups. On the basis of the specialization in the early
phases of my career, which concerned the knowledge children utilize to explain their
helping behavior or their academic successes and failures, the present focus on the
processes of knowledge acquisition and its change has emerged. Within this framework, I have had the opportunity to combine my interests in history, politics, and
social psychology by paying special attention to political beliefs shared by group
members. The idea of writing about group beliefs crystallized several years ago.
It all began one day in January 1985. Yaacov Trope from the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem called and asked me to give a colloquium about my work in political
psychology. At that time, after abandoning my interest in prosocial behavior and
achievement attributions, I focused on examining separately various specific political beliefs such as patriotism, siege mentality, and conflict. The invitation to give a
colloquium caused me to try to integrate these separate ideas into one coherent
framework. It was then that I began to use the term group beliefs.
However, the meaning of the concept which I first proposed is different from the
one presented in this book. From the present perspective, my first proposal was not
successful. Although I was confident that the beliefs I studied had something in
common, the nature of the commonality was not yet clear to me.
The next opportunity to come up with a better conception of group beliefs came
with the help of Jeff Rubin, who agreed to include my presentation about group
beliefs in the International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) program for the
1986 meeting in Amsterdam. After working on the manuscript for several months
under hectic Israeli conditions, I sent the draft of the paper to leek Ajzen, Yehuda
Amir, Nehemia Friedland, Paul Hare, and Shalom Schwartz for review. The critical
reactions came quickly, and 3 months before the meeting the presentation was
still disjointed.
At this point it is necessary to note that my brother, Yoram, a close friend and a
colleague, was the most helpful supporter of my ideas about group beliefs. He
patiently listened and provided constructive, encouraging feedback which energized
viii
Preface
me to continue to think, in spite of the initial failures. And so one day, as introductory psychology textbooks describe, on an evening walk with Yoram, an "aha effect"
occurred. Ideas crossed my mind and the basic conception presented in this book
was formed. The paper was quickly written and presented at the ISPP meeting.
David Sears, Jaap Rabbie, and Leonard Saxe were strict discussants, providing
important comments that helped me to improve the original conception.
Then I began a period of collecting material, expanding ideas, and forming new
ones. It was only during my sabbatical at Brandeis University that I had the opportunity and conditions to write the chapters of the book. Without the hospitable
environment of the Psychology Department at Brandeis, I would not have been able
to finish the book so quickly. The Brandeis Psychology Department provided me
with ideal writing conditions and with all the necessary help. In this vein, Judy
Woodman from Brandeis deserves special thanks for typing and retyping the whole
manuscript within a framework of time that allowed me to finish it.
The School of Education at Tel-Aviv University not only was patient with this type
of work, but also provided financial aid for assistants and for typing the final revision, which was done by Alice Zilcha. Thanks to her.
Bill Stone read the whole manuscript, and his comments were of great help in
the final revision. Also a number of colleagues read various chapters of the book
and provided valuable feedback which helped to improve the final product. My
gratitude is expressed to leek Ajzen, Yehuda Bauer, Michael Berbaum, Susan Fiske,
Ken Gergen, Carl Graumann, Gerda Lederer, John Levine, Miriam Lewin, Leslie
Zebrowitz-McArthur, Serge Moscovici, Jerry Samet, Ervin Staub, and Lloyd
Strickland. This is the place to mention that Ken Gergen encouraged me to write a
postscript in the book.
The help of Ronit Wienman and Shelley Bloomfield-Shoham from Tel-Aviv
University in the bibliographical search is gladly acknowledged. Michael A. Cohen
and David Adler from Brandeis University helped to edit and type portions of the
manuscript. Of special value was the help of Dikla Antebi, who assisted in the collection of bibliographical information.
Finally, the staff of Springer-Verlag deserves special thanks for encouraging me to
write the book, patiently waiting for the final product, and helping to turn it into a
readable volume.
Tel-Aviv, Israel
Daniel Bar-Tal
Contents
Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Introduction ........................................ ......... .
vii
5
11
15
20
23
24
28
33
35
36
39
43
46
47
47
57
61
63
63
69
Contents
72
73
75
77
79
Mergence of Groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Subgrouping. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Change of Group Beliefs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Group Schism ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Disintegration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Summary..................................................
79
81
83
86
90
91
93
Delegitimization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
A Process of Delegitimizing Jews-1933-1945. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contents of German Delegitimizing Beliefs About Jews. . . . . . . . . . . . .
German Delegitimizing Beliefs as Group Beliefs ..................
The Cultural Background of Delegitimization. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Spreading the Delegitimizing Beliefs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Functions of Delegitimizing Beliefs . . . . . .. . . .. . .. . . .. . . . . .. .. . ..
Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
93
95
96
97
98
99
102
104
8. Implications...............................................
105
105
110
112
115
Group of Scientists. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Scientists' Group Beliefs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Changes of Scientists' Group Beliefs ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
115
116
118
120
121
Author Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
133
137
Introduction
Two of the important concepts frequently used by social psychologists are the terms
belief and group. Though much effort has been directed toward studying them, they
have been rarely examined as related phenomena. While beliefs have been studied
mainly on an intraindividuallevel, the traditional analysis of groups has paid relatively little attention to beliefs as a group phenomenon. Within the first framework,
social psychologists have been preoccupied with studying beliefs as characteristics
of an individual. The studies of dissonance, impression formation, attribution,
social cognition, or attitudes have mainly focused on the microprocesses of structure, formation, and change within a single person (see, for example, Abelson,
Aronson, McGuire, Newcomb, Rosenberg, & Tannenbaum, 1968; Fiske & Taylor,
1984; Krech & Crutchfield, 1948; Markus & Zajonc, 1985; Wyer & Srull, 1984).
At the same time, the students of groups, after the fiasco of McDougall's (1920)
attempt to introduce the concept of group mind, have not tried seriously to study
cognitive products as group characteristics (Allport, 1968).
Although beliefs do not exist apart from individuals, they cannot be studied only
on an individual's level. Individuals who live in groups hold common beliefs which
define their reality, not only as persons, but also as group members. This reality
becomes especially important when group members become aware that they share it.
There may be an important difference for the group between the situations when a
beliefis held by one member of the group, or even by all the members, who are not
aware of sharing this belief, and the situations when a belief is held by all the members or a portion of them, who are aware of this sharing.
Beliefs in the former situations may be influential for the group as a whole, as in
the cases when a leader's beliefs affect the followers. However, this does not provide
sufficient explanation for the binding element that allows group members to perceive themselves as a group, to develop collective identity, to have common tradition, and to act in a coordinated manner. As Lewin (1947) pointed out, "It seems to
be impossible to predict group behavior without taking into account group goals,
group standards, group values, and the way a group 'sees' its own situation and that
of other groups" (p. 12).
Introduction
Lewin's idea is based on the view that individuals not only think, feel, and see
things from a personal perspective, but also from the standpoint of the group of
which they are a part. As noted by Sherif (1966), group members share attitudes,
sentiments, aspirations, goals, values, and norms which pertain to group's life. This
view is repeatedly emphasized by social scientists. For example, Me,ad (1934) suggested that people perceive, judge, or think according to the frame of reference of the
group in which they are participating. Accordingly, the socialized person is also, to
some extent, a microcosm of society. That is, group members share norms, values,
and goals which allow them to define the world from the perspectives they share
with others.
Beliefs that are known to be shared by group members may have important cognitive, affective, and behavioral implications both for group members as individuals
and for the group as a whole. Specifically, these beliefs may contribute to the explanation of the behavioral direction that the group takes; the influence that group
members exert on their leaders, and vice versa; the coordination of group activities;
the structure ofthe group; and the intensity and involvement of group members with
certain attitudes. First of all, however, shared beliefs have the distinctive potential
for determining the boundaries of the group. Thus, it is suggested that in the same
way that understanding an individual (his/her attitudes and behavior) requires
knowledge of his/her personal beliefs, understanding a group's structure, attitudes,
and behaviors requires a cognizance of the group's beliefs.
It was Asch (1952) who pointed out that:
Group facts must have their foundation in individuals; group consciousness, group
purpose, and group values have an existence in individuals, and in them alone. But
they cease to be "merely" individual facts by virtue of their reference to others. It
follows that a group process is neither the sum of individual activity nor a fact
added to the activities of individuals. (p. 252)
In line with the above view, it is suggested that the study of shared beliefs by group
members should come as an addition to the traditional interest in a group which concerns mainly such topics as structural qualities of a group, environmental features
of group activities, group influence, individual characteristics of group members,
group performance, and group interaction patterns (e.g., Blumberg, Hare, Kent, &
Davies, 1983; Cartwright & Zander, 1968; Golembiewski, 1962; Hare, 1976;
McGrath & Altman, 1966; Shaw, 1976; Stogdill, 1959; Verba, 1961). Thus, the
present approach neither replaces the previously mentioned topics of interest nor
precludes other disciplinary analyses; it points out the importance of group beliefs
in studying groups.
The present book attempts to call attention to cognitive products of beliefs as
group characteristics. Specifically, it introduces a new concept of group beliefs that
accounts for the fact that group members share beliefs and consider some of them
as defining their "groupness." Moreover, it suggests that the proposed conception of
group beliefs sheds a new light on the structure and processes of groups. That is, the
conceptual framework presented here can be used not only as a description of group
characteristics, but also in the analysis of changes that a group may go through.
Introduction
The book begins with the discussion of beliefs, including their epistemological
foundation, definition, and characteristics (chapter 1). Chapter 2 reviews various
past attempts to deal with the cognitive group products. It focuses on conceptions
pr<;>posed at the end of the previous century and the beginning of the present one.
Using this basis, the conception of group beliefs is presented in chapter 3. This chapter not only defines the concept and indicates ways to study it, but also discusses its
implication for a group perspective. Subsequently, the contents of group beliefs are
illustrated and characteristics of group beliefs are described (chapter 4).
Chapters 5 and 6 analyze the relations between various group processes and group
beliefs. Chapter 5 suggests that the formation and maintenance of groups is based,
among other factors, on group beliefs. That is, a necessary condition for group formation and existence is the formulation and preservation of group beliefs. Chapter
6 analyzes group changes such as group mergence, subgrouping, split (schism), and
disintegration as being underlain by the dynamics of group beliefs.
Chapter 7 provides an example of group beliefs. The selected case illustrates group
beliefs of a nation. The case discusses the delegitimizing beliefs of Germans about
Jews during the Nazi era (1933-1945). It tries to demonstrate that group beliefs are
a useful conceptual tool that can also explain large groups' behaviors.
The last chapter (chapter 8) discusses the implications of the presented conception
for the study of groups. In this discussion, a special attempt is made to point out the
contribution of the presented concept for social psychology in general. Finally, the
Postscript suggests that the present framework may be useful in analyzing the group
dynamics of scientists, as they produce scientific knowledge. In some respects, this
part brings the volume full circle, since the first chapter outlines the philosophical
basis of the present conception.
The book is written by a social psychologist for social scientists. Although my
foundations in social psychology are identifiable, an attempt was made to write a
book with implications beyond one discipline. Groups exist in various settings, in
different systems, and are a subject of interest for psychologists, sociologists,
anthropologists, political scientists, and other specialists. The concept of group
beliefs characterizes all collectives whose members agree that they constitute a
group. It can be applied to the analysis of small groups, organizations, and even to
large groups such as religious denominations or nations.
Individuals are at the same time members of various groups-small and large
groups. Each group has group beliefs, which its members acquire. Individuals, thus,
store different group beliefs, some of which may be of great importance for them,
irrespective of group size.
The selected case presented in chapter 7 focuses on specific group beliefs of a
large group-a nation. This was a difficult choice, since the analysis of a nation's
group beliefs is especially problematic, as will be pointed out in the book. Although
there is an enormous quantity of other examples of group beliefs pertaining to various groups such as sects, interest groups, or political parties, many of which are
described in the book, I decided to devote a chapter to a case of a nation's group
beliefs. This "mission impossible" stems from my deep interest in beliefs that are
part of a nation's members' cognitive repertoire, determine their reality, shape their
Introduction
attitudes, and above all influence their behavior as a group, especially of the leadership (see for example Bar-Tal, D., 1986, 1988, 1989a, 1989b, in press-a; Bar-Tal, D.,
& Antebi, 1989; Bar-Tal, D., & Geva, 1985; Bar-Tal, D., Kruglanski, & Klar, 1989;
Klar, Bar-Tal, D., & Kruglanski, 1988). In spite of the difficulty of studying group
beliefs of nations, I do believe that they exist, and anyone who desires to understand
policies, leaders' decisions, or nations' actions also has to take them into account.
Thus, the objective ofthis book is to open a new avenue of understanding of group
behavior for the students of groups, in general. Therefore, a special effort was made
not only to rely on writings of social scientists from different disciplines, but also
to provide examples from different types of groups. This was done because the study
of group behavior is an important endeavor. Humans spend a considerable portion
of their lives in groups, and group identity is an inseparable part of an individual's
self-perception as a group member. The psychological meaning of group identity
is that group members share beliefs that are considered as unique characteristics
of the group.
Chapter 1
Nature of Beliefs
This book is concerned with the contents of the beliefs (Le., knowledge) that are
shared by group members. Since group beliefs is the book's major theme, it is important first to describe a conception of knowledge that serves as a basis for further
analysis of beliefs (units of knowledge, either on the individual's or group's level).
This description serves as an "identification card" that outlines the fundamental
premises that underlie the present conceptual framework.
1. Nature of Beliefs
The study of knowledge has received special attention throughout the history of
science. First philosophers and, more recently, behavioral scientists have attempted
to understand the essence of knowledge. Philosophy has designated an area of
interest called epistemology for those who have been preoccupied with theories of
knowledge. Philosophers from Plato and Aristotle, through Descartes, Locke, and
Kant, to Russell and Popper have tried to assess the nature of knowledge and determine its sources and validity. In contrast, behavioral scientists, including cognitive
psychologists, have focused not so much on the philosophical questions of essence
and validity of knowledge, but more on its structure in the mind, specific contents,
acquisition process, and effects on various individuals' reactions.
Through the years, thousands of pages have been written about human knowledge.
It is beyond the scope of this chapter to review the various views, theories, and
approaches to this important subject. Nevertheless, the ideas presented in this book
have a founding base: They are influenced by the nonjustificational position propagated by the new philosophy of science (Weimer, 1979). This approach will be
summarized.
Unlimited scope of beliefs The scope of beliefs is infinite. It has no a priori boundaries and no fantasy can establish its limits. Human thoughts are endless in their
scope. All the time, new ideas, opinions, or conceptions (Le., beliefs) are formed.
Beliefs that were not even in the human repertoire a short time ago are considered
as examined facts today, and there is no way to know what will be the content of
beliefs tomorrow.
Within the presented framework, any belief can be considered knowledge. Both
individuals and groups have their own sets of beliefs that they consider to be
I. Nature of Beliefs
knowledge. This view makes the problem even more complicated, since it is impossible to encompass all the beliefs of today. The combined beliefs of the more than
4 billion individuals who are alive today, and the accumulated knowledge from the
past that has survived and is available today, are of such scope that they already
today can be considered as infinite. The imagination probably cannot even grasp
what the scope of future knowledge will be.
The accumulated know ledge can be categorized in any number of ways. For example, philosophers make a distinction between knowledge by acquaintance and
knowledge by description (Russell, 1948), or between knowing how and knowing
that (Ryle, 1949). Beliefs can be aggregated in numerous ways to various categories
and each category can be further subdivided into even more categories. Human
beings as individuals and groups devise their own ways of categorization. The
numerous categorizations are derived from different contents of knowledge that
people possess and different ways that people view the same knowledge.
Changing status ofbeliefs. What human beings consider as their knowledge changes
from time to time and differs from group to group (Kaufman, 1960; Sayers, 1985).
Beliefs that were once considered ignorant or faulty are viewed as facts and verity
today and vice versa. Also, what is considered as superstition and myth by one
group is viewed as truth and holy writ by another. This feature implies the dynamic
nature of beliefs. On the one hand, beliefs are continuously added, omitted, and/or
modified, while, on the other hand, the extent of attributed truth to any given belief
may also change.
This case for relativism begins with anthropological and historical observations.
From these two disciplines we have learned that beliefs about the world differ from
culture to culture and from one historical epoch to another. The objectivity of beliefs
is determined within a particular social framework of thought. It is a judgment that is
unavoidably relative to a particular social framework, though knowledge is not based
on mere product of discourse, without any basis in the environmental reality. The
environment around us is real, but human beings have physical, anatomical, and psychologicallimitations in their cognizance of the environment. It is assumed that individuals perceive the world only through their own interpretation and understanding,
which are stamped by the place and time they live in. Thus, perception of reality cannot be separated from its social context. Any theory of beliefs must take into account
the social context in which beliefs are formed. Objectivity and truth are declared by
the given society and held as such. But often they are limited to a certain time, place,
or situation (e.g., Berger & Luckmann, 1966; Mannheim, 1954; Merton, 1957).
The idea that knowledge is relative is not alien to social psychologists. Gergen
(1973) went as far as suggesting that social psychology is an historical science.
According to him, social knowledge changes with time and does not generally transcend its historical boundaries. Similarly, Triandis (1972, 1976) emphasized cultural differences with regard to contents of knowledge in his writings. Human
knowledge, according to Triandis, is culturally determined. Individuals in different
cultures have different experiences, form different knowledge, and later approach
information in the environment differently.
Individual differences. Individuals form their beliefs on the basis of their own experiences and attach meanings to them accordingly. Since each person has his/her own
unique set of experiences, individuals differ in the set of beliefs that they acquire and
form. Each individual perceives, experiences, and understands the world in his/her
own way (McGinn, 1983; Poole, 1972). This view implies that individuals are captives of their own perspectives. Individuals often perceive and evaluate the same
events, objects, or people differently. Their knowledge is objective for themselves
and provides their reality. What is considered as real and true is real and true for
themselves.
The accumulated evidence in psychology supports the described view of beliefs.
Psychologists, especially cognitive psychologists, have long realized that each person forms a unique set of knowledge on the basis of his/her own experiences, cognitive capacity, and motivations (e.g:, Bartlett, 1932; Bruner, Goodnow, & Austin,
1956; Krech & Crutchfield, 1948). As Neisser (1967) noted, '~ .. The world of
experience is produced by the man who experiences it. . .. Whatever we know
about reality has been mediated, not only by the organs of sense but by complex
systems which interpret and reinterpret sensory information" (p. 3).
The process of knowledge formation takes place from the moment the infant
comes to the earth's light until the moment of death. In this process, individuals continually acquire, revise, add, omit, and change their beliefs on the basis of their abilities and motivations (Bar-Tal & Saxe, in press). However, this process is always
based on previously acquired beliefs, into which are elaborated newly formed beliefs
(Bransford, 1980). The outcomes of perception, interpretation, and evaluation
depend on previously acquired beliefs. Thus, the contents of new beliefs always
depend on the contents of beliefs formed in the past. This process assures that no two
people will have exactly the same repertoire of beliefs (see Markus & Zajonc, 1985;
Fiske & Taylor, 1984).
The description is even more complex when one takes into account that out of the
available stored beliefs, only a few are accessible at any given time. To a large extent,
these beliefs determine the contents of judgments, identifications, or impressions
that an individual makes (Higgins & King, 1981). It is difficult to determine a priori
what beliefs will be accessible at any given time, since the accessibility of beliefs is
not only influenced by external information, but also by internal factors such as the
flow of associations and motivations.
Although knowledge is subjective, it should be recognized that individuals who
have similar experiences or collect the same information may develop partially
common knowledge. Individuals share beliefs mostly as members of the same
group. Within this framework, they live the same experiences and are provided
with the same information. The extent of knowledge commonality depends on the
extent of group members' participation in the group's life. The more intensive
and extensive the participation of the group members, the more beliefs they share.
On another level, however, the development of mass communication has facilitated
the sharing of knowledge, not only among members of the same group, but also
among individuals living in different parts of the world who are members of different groups.
10
1. Nature of Beliefs
Beliefs are organized. Human knowledge does not consist of an amalgam of unrelated beliefs, but rather of systematically organized sets of interrelated beliefs. That
is, individuals group beliefs into categories to provide structure and meaning. These
categories consist of interrelated beliefs that allow for a coherent view of the world.
The organization of beliefs is fluid and dynamic. The categories expand or contract
and new categories are added continuously. The categories are constructed around
certain themes that have meaning for the individual.
The proposition that individuals organize their knowledge was greatly advanced
by Gestalt psychologists. In their view, perceived phenomena are organized wholes.
They convincingly argued that for perceptual organization, the way the parts are
seen is determined by the configuration of the whole. Modern cognitive psychology
has advanced these ideas. Knowledge, or cognition as it is often labeled, is viewed
as being structured and organized into representational categories called schemata,
symbols, frames, maps, or images, to name just a few. They represent the world of
the individuals (e.g., Bransford, 1980; Neisser, 1967). Individuals acquire new
information and form new ideas which are classified and stored according to the
assigned category. Later, such an organization enables a retrieval of knowledge and
its use in various inferences.
Content-Process Distinction
Of special importance for the present analysis is the distinction between contents of
knowledge and process of knowledge formation. Contents of knowledge refer to
beliefs that a person uses to characterize people, behaviors, events, objects, places,
or situations. Contents are people's representations of reality. Processes of knowledge formation refer to the sequence of operations performed by individuals as they
form a given bit of knowledge. The description may focus on overt or covert behaviors in the process of knowledge formation. Processes of knowledge formation consist of the acquisition of knowledge and change of knowledge, which in social
psychological terms consist of such specific processes as impression formation, attitude change, social perception, and social influence.
Both contents and processes may be formulated on different levels of generality.
Contents of knowledge can either refer to specific objects, such as a tree, a stone, a
particular event, or a specific person, or refer to general categories, such as reinforcement, law, or symbol. The generality of the content does not necessarily imply
its universality. Specific contents, as well as categories, can be held by a particular
person or shared by a number of individuals, by a whole group, or even by the
majority of human beings. A process of knowledge acquisition can also be either
specific, such as a description of how someone received particular news, or general,
when it is described in general terms, such as a sequence of operations in the
decision-making process or impression formation, without referring to specific
decisions or impressions. Psychologists have made great efforts to describe general
processes of knowledge formation.
The distinction between contents and processes of knowledge is not a new one. A
number of social psychologists have paid attention to this important distinction
(e.g., Kruglanski, 1980; McClelland, 1955; Newell & Simon, 1972; Scott, Osgood,
Meaning of Beliefs
11
& Peterson, 1979). For example, Kruglanski proposed a description of the universal
process of knowledge acquisition, which takes place irrespective of the contents that
are processed. According to him, the epistemic process of knowledge acquisition
consists of two phases. First, there is the cognitive generation phase, which
addresses the issue of generation of the contents of knowledge. Second, there is the
cognitive validation phase in which a degree of confidence is attributed to the generated contents. The first phase of cognitive generation focuses on what was
metaphorically described by Karl Popper (1972) using a "search light" analogy of
human consciousness, that is, the contents of knowledge that come to mind at a certain time. Since the human mental capacity is limited at any given time, individuals
can only generate a restricted number of contents on the basis of incoming information and/or their own insights.
The second phase of cognitive validation is performed via the consistency principle. An individual tests the generated cognitions or their implications against the
evidence (i.e., stored beliefs) he/she possesses. If the evidence is logically consistent with the implications, then the individual's confidence in the validity of this
cognition is strengthened. But if the evidence is inconsistent, then the individual's
confidence in the cognition may be undermined. A central postulate of this theory
is that the process does not have a natural point of termination. In principle, at least,
it is always possible to come up with a number of alternative hypotheses (contents)
which may be consistent with the same body of evidence. In reality, however,
individuals end the epistemic process with regard to certain cognitions by bestowing
on them a certain degree of confidence without considering further alternatives.
This cognitive phenomenon is termed epistemicfreezing. In contrast, the phenomenon of entertaining alternative contents, validating them, and eventually replacing
previous beliefs with the new contents represents epistemic unfreezing.
The presented view differentiates between studies of knowledge acquisition processes and knowledge contents (see for example, Bar-Tal, D., Bar-Tal, Y., Geva, &
Yarkin-Levin, in press; Bar-Tal, Y. & Bar-Tal, D. in press). While the first direction
usually attempts to reveal the universal principles of knowledge formation, irrespective of specific contents, the second direction frequently focuses on the specific contents that characterize particular individuals or groups. The latter direction is of
special importance for understanding these individuals or groups whose knowledge is
real for themselves and reflects their understanding of the world. A grasp of this
understanding allows one to unravel the cognitive bases of their behavior.
This book concerns the contents of knowledge (i.e., beliefs), specifically of beliefs
that are shared by group members. Thus, a belief as a unit of knowledge is an especially important concept for the present analysis. Therefore, the next part of this
chapter will describe and elaborate on the nature of beliefs.
Meaning of Beliefs
A belief, as a unit of knowledge, is often labeled as an idea, cognition, thought, or
opinion. As indicated before, the contents of beliefs are of an unlimited scope. They
may refer to any object, attribute, or relationship between them in varying levels
12
1. Nature of Beliefs
of complexity. Beliefs are held by individuals; their contents, however, are not
only significant for themselves as individuals, but also for groups in which they are
members.
The Study of Beliefs
Psychologists, sociologists, anthropologists, historians, and political scientists use
and study the term belief Surprisingly, the uses of the term by these groups do not
differ substantially, although there are some differences in the definitions, conceptualizations, and methods of investigation.
Two major directions in the study of beliefs can be identified. In one direction,
beliefs have been examined in their totality. The study of beliefs in their totality has
attempted to depict the total set of an individuals' beliefs. This direction has also
used alternative terms such as cognition, knowledge, or cognitive map. In the
second direction, specific categories of beliefs have been studied. Behavioral scientists have had a long-term interest in such concepts as goals, values, ideology, norms,
attributions, intentions, or expectations, which are subcategories of beliefs. In this
direction, the interests focus on the contribution of the specific category of beliefs
to the understanding of human behavior.
In principle, the study of beliefs either as a totality or in their subcategories can
be classified into four areas: (a) acquisition and change of beliefs, (b) structure of
beliefs, (c) effects of beliefs, and (d) contents of beliefs. The first area calls attention
to the intrapersonal, interpersonal, intragroup, or intergroup process through which
beliefs are acquired or changed, and various factors and conditions that influence
these processes. The second area concentrates on the modes in which the beliefs are
represented, stored, and organized in the mind. The third area focuses on the effects
that beliefs have on individuals' and groups' behavior and affect. The fourth area
concerns various specific contents of beliefs that an individual or group may have.
Social psychologists, who pay special attention to the study of an individual's cognitive repertoire, have devoted much effort to the examination of human beliefs. The
coming pages will review some of the beliefs' conceptions that pertain to their
definition, classification, origin, and characterization. These conceptions mainly
illustrate the way social psychologists have approached the study of beliefs.
Beliefs have been viewed by social psychologists as units of cognition. They constitute the totality of an individual's knowledge, including what people consider as
facts, opinions, or hypotheses, as well as faith. Accordingly, any content can be the
subject of a belief. Along this line, Krech and Crutchfield (1948) defined a belief as
"an enduring organization of perceptions and cognitions about some aspect of the
individual's world" (p. 150). Katz (1960) defined a belief as a description and perception of an object, its characteristics, and its relationship to other objects.
Rokeach and Rothman (1965) viewed a belief as a combination of a subject with
characterization. Later, as one classification possibility, Rokeach (1968) distinguished among three types of beliefs: descriptive or existential beliefs, which indicate truth or falsity; evaluative beliefs, which judge whether the object of belief is
good or bad; and prescriptive or proscriptive beliefs, which judge whether some
means or ends of action are desirable or undesirable.
Meaning of Beliefs
13
Another social psychologist, Bern (1970), suggested that "if a man perceives some
relationship between two things or between something and a characteristic of it, he
is said to hold a belief' (p.4). He differentiated between basic beliefs, which are
based either on one's own sensory experience or on external authority, and higher
order beliefs, which are based on premises. The former beliefs, called primitive, are
either products of direct experience with the environment or acquired from external
authority. The latter beliefs are formed by inferences from primitive beliefs.
More recently, an extensive analysis of beliefs was provided by Fishbein and Ajzen
(1975). They defined a belief as a person's subjective probability judgment concerning "a relation between the object of the belief and some other object, value, concept,
or attribute" (p. 131). Thus, a belief that links an object to some attribute represents
information about the object. The strength of a belief depends on the ascribed likelihood that the object has the attribute in question. Like Bern (1970), Fishbein and
Ajzen differentiated beliefs on the basis of the ways in which they are formed: (a)
Descriptive beliefs are formed on the basis of direct experience. They are derived
from perception. Through the senses individuals absorb information that serves as
a basis for these types of beliefs. (b) Inferential beliefs go beyond the directly observable events and are based on rules of logic that allow inferences. They are formed
through thinking that is based on stored beliefs collected in the past. (c) Informational beliefs are formed on the basis of information provided by outside sources
such as other individuals, books, television, radio, newspapers, or magazines.
Other behavioral scientists have either accepted the psychological definition of a
belief of have adapted the concept for the specific objective of their discipline. For
example, Holsti (1962), a political scientist, using Miller, Galanter, and Pribram's
(1960) definition, proposed that an individual's belief system is composed of images
and constitutes the total knowledge of that individual about the world. Wilker and
Milbrath (1970) based their view of a belief system on Kurt Lewin's field theory.
According to their approach, an individual's belief system reflects the psychological
field defined as a perceptual space. A belief system can include only those elements
of which individuals are aware. In this vein, sociologists Borhek and Curtis (1975)
defined a belief system as "a set of related ideas (learned and shared), which has
some permanence, and to which individuals and/or group exhibit some commitment" (p. 5).
As examples of the specific beliefs category that deals with particular contents,
George (1969) reintroduced an "operational code" concept that refers to beliefs
about politics that are divided into "instrumental beliefs" and "philosophical beliefs."
The former refer to contents about ends-means relationships in the context of political action, and the latter refer to such general contents of human life as "the foundation nature of politics, the nature of political conflict, the role of the individual in
history, etc." (p. 199). Similarly, Axelrod (1976) uses the term "cognitive map" to
describe a set of conceptual and causal assertions with respect to a particular policy
domain. The conceptual assertions are objects in a person's world (e.g., tax rates,
national security, or population size), and causal assertions are regarded as relationships between concepts. Perceived combinations and changes in concepts affect the
thought calculus of the individual because he or she links different concepts together
through complex networks of causal beliefs.
14
1. Nature of Beliefs
Characteristics of Beliefs
15
Characteristics of Beliefs
Psychologists have suggested different features and dimensions to characterize beliefs.
It is interesting therefore to review their scope and variety as a background for
describing characteristics that are important for the present conception. In one of the
earlier conceptions, Krech and Crutchfield (1948) proposed the following seven
characteristics to describe beliefs: kind, content, precision, specificity, strength,
importance, and verifiability. Differences in kind refer to the various categories to
which beliefs can be classified (e.g., beliefs about art, philosophy, God). The contents
refer to specific topics that are the subjects of beliefs (e.g., "It is good to be a group
member;' or "I dislike large groups''). Precision describes a beliefs clarity and
differentiation from other beliefs. While some beliefs are clear, explicit, and differentiated, others are vague, confused, and undifferentiated. Specificity refers to the relations among sets of beliefs. While some beliefs stand virtually alone, others are related
to different sets of beliefs. Strength describes the persistence of beliefs a long time.
While some beliefs are resistant to change, others are temporary and easily changed.
Importance describes the extent to which a belief accounts for a person's behavior.
Some beliefs are important to individuals' daily behavior, while other beliefs are not.
Verifiability refers to the degree a given belief can be proven. This characteristic
reflects a subjective conception of what is proven and what is not proven.
Rokeach, who has spent much of his career studying beliefs, proposed three major
dimensions to characterize belief systems (Rokeach, 1960). The first dimension
differentiates between belief and disbelief systems. According to Rokeach "the belief
system is conceived to represent all the beliefs, sets, expectancies, or hypotheses,
conscious and unconscious, that a person at a given time accepts as true ofthe world
he lives in." The disbelief system contains those beliefs that, "to one degree or
another, a person at a given time rejects as false" (p. 33). This dimension can be further differentiated on the basis of degrees of isolation and differentiation. The
former property describes the degree to which beliefs are related to each other and
the latter describes the richness of details. The second dimension, centralperipheral dimension, refers to the contents and sources of beliefs. Central beliefs
are about the nature of the physical world, the nature of self, and the generalized
other; intermediate beliefs pertain to authorities; and the peripheral beliefs are
those beliefs that are derived from authority. The third dimension describes a person's reference to time. Some beliefs contain a broad perspective of time consisting
of past, present, and future, while other beliefs focus on one time without presenting
the continuity from past to future. In his later writing, Rokeach (1973) elaborated
the second dimension, suggesting that the more central a belief, the more it will
resistchange and the more it is connected to other beliefs. Central beliefs are mostly
derived from a personal encounter with the object of a belief and are supported by
unanimous social consensus.
According to Bern (1970) it is possible to characterize beliefs with three features
that pertain to interrelationships among beliefs:
(1) The degree to which they are differentiated (vertical structure), which means
the extent to which they are based on a long chain of syllogistic reasoning, or in other
16
1. Nature of Beliefs
words, the extent to which they are based on quasi-logical inference. An example of
such an inference is, "Smoking causes cancer. Cancer can cause death. Therefore,
smokers die younger than nonsmokers" (p. 11);
(2) The extent to which they are broadly based (horizontal structure), which
depends on the number of syllogistic chains of reasoning that lead to the same belief
(Le., a number of propositions that lead to a conclusion). A conclusion, "Smokers
die younger;' based on several propositions such as "Smoking causes cancer;'
"Smokers drink more heavily than nonsmokers;' and "Smokers are more prone to
have heart disease;' is an example of horizontal structure;
(3) The degree of centrality, which describes their effects on other beliefs. A
change of a central belief leads to alteration of many other beliefs, while a change
of peripheral beliefs does not affect other beliefs.
Although it is probably possible to think about additional characteristics, the
review described the ones most used by social psychologists. The suggested characteristics have to be evaluated for their use in explaining human reactions. They cannot serve only a descriptive purpose, but must also serve as a contributing factor to
understanding differentiating behavior of individuals and groups.
The present approach focuses on four features: confidence, centrality, interrelationship, and functionality. These features, which characterize beliefs of an individual as
well as of a group, are relevant to the conceptual framework to be proposed later. They
are used through the analysis and are essential for the analysis of group behavior.
Confidence
As implied by the definition, beliefs differ in the extent to which a person has confidence in them (Kruglanski, 1989). The dimension of confidence indicates that a
person may have a minimum confidence in some beliefs, and therefore these beliefs
are considered as hypotheses, possibilities, or uncertainties. In other beliefs, a
person may have full confidence, and therefore these beliefs are considered as facts,
truths, or verities. The former beliefs will be expressed using "possibly" or "maybe;'
while the latter are stated in definite ways. Between the two extremes of minimum
confidence and full confidence are various degrees of confidence on which different
beliefs can be placed. Thus, for example, a person may be absolutely confident that
he observed an accident, that Columbus discovered America in 1492, that his father
is a smart person, or that democracy is the best political system; but at the same time
he may be doubtful about whether he saw a flower in a garden, whether the Earth
was created by God, whether his friend is a nice person, or whether justice can be
achieved in any political system. People can be confident, or doubtful, in any content of beliefs. Also, there may be various reasons and causes for an individual's high
or low confidence in a given belief. Confidence reflects a subjective state of mind
that does not necessarily relate to any specific ways of verification or proof.
Centrality
Another dimension that differentiates beliefs is centrality. The degree of a belief's
centrality is expressed by the frequency with which the belief is accessible in the
Characteristics of Beliefs
17
cognitive system and the extent to which it is relevant for a wide range ofevaluations,
decisions, or judgments, including behaviors (Bar-Tal, D., 1986). That is, central
beliefs are often accessible in the cognitive system and are frequently taken into
consideration when individuals make inferences about other issues, including decisions to perform various behaviors. (This definition differs from other conceptions
of centrality.) The first condition reflects how often people think about the given
belief, since accessibility indicates the readiness with which a stored belief is
recovered from memory (Higgins & King, 1981). The second condition reflects how
often the belief is utilized in various cognitive processes of knowledge formation
(e.g., decision making or impression formation), since individuals utilize beliefs
that are relevant to the specific epistemic question that they are entertaining (Wyer
& Srull, 1986).
Of the beliefs that an individual has, some are central while others are less central.
The least central, peripheral beliefs are almost never accessible and almost never
taken into consideration when a person makes evaluations or decisions. They are
available in the cognitive system, but they are rarely recalled. This does not mean
that peripheral beliefs cannot be important at certain times. Peripheral beliefs may
be accessible and influential in specific judgments, while the centrality feature, like
other features, reflects a characterization that lasts over time. Central beliefs are
often accessible and relevant in various inferences. However, it should not be
implied that central beliefs are constantly accessible or that their centrality lasts
forever. With time, central beliefs may move into periphery.
An example of central beliefs may be such thoughts as "I am an Israeli;"~ Ph.D.
degree is crucial for life success;' "I love this person;' or "Exercising may keep me
young" (see Bar-Tal, D., 1989a; Bar-Tal, D., & Antebi, 1989 for specific examples).
It means that these beliefs are frequently accessible and relevant to inferences and
decision making that people holding them make. Any content of a belief may be central, and individuals and groups differ with regard to contents that are central in
their system.
Interrelationship
In principle, systems of beliefs are coherent, organized structures. This means that
beliefs do not normally exist in isolation from one another, but are related to each
other, forming systems. Nevenheless, beliefs differ in the extent to which they are
related. Thus, while some beliefs are interrelated into large systems, others are
interrelated into small systems. Some may even be isolated - not related to any other
beliefs. This characteristic has been of special interest for political scientists and
sociologists (e.g., Converse, 1964; Dawson, 1979; Jaros & Grant, 1974; Lane,
1973). For example, Converse views a set of interrelated beliefs as a belief system,
which he defines as "a configuration of ideas and attitudes in which the elements are
bound together by some form of constraint or functional interdependence" (p. 207).
The systems differ with regard to a range of objects that "are referents for the ideas
and attitudes in the system" (p. 208). People differ with regard to the extent to which
they construct their beliefs into systems. The most important claim by Converse is
that the political beliefs of many individuals, especially of the less educated, are not
18
1. Nature of Beliefs
organized into systems. Obviously, the degree of interrelationship may vary from
individual to individual, but can also vary from domain to domain. Individuals may
have interrelated beliefs in some domains, but not in others (see Bar-Tal, 1989a, for
example). Thus, for example, a person's beliefs about consumer behavior may be
related to beliefs about the economic and political systems. But at the same time, two
or three beliefs about the Arctic Sea may be isolated.
Functionality
Beliefs differ with regard to the functions that they fulfill. The idea that beliefs fulfill
various functions for the needs of different people is not a new one. Years ago, social
psychologists proposed functional theories of beliefs and attitudes. Krech and
Crutchfield (1948) were among the first social psychologists who pointed out the
functional significance of beliefs and attitudes. They suggested that the fundamental
function of beliefs is to provide a meaningful structure of the world, but that beliefs
also serve other needs that arise in response to various situations. Smith (1968),
who propagated the functional view of knowledge, suggested that "a person acquires
and maintains attitudes and other learned psychological structures to the extent that
they are useful to him in his inner economy of adjustment and his outer economy of
adaptation" (p. 86). Rokeach (1960) suggested two major functions of beliefs.
According to him "all belief-disbelief systems serve two powerful and conflicting sets
of motives at the same time: the need for a cognitive framework to know and to
understand, and the need to ward off threatening aspects of reality" (p. 67).
Adorno, Frenkel-Brunswik, Levinson, and Sanford (1950) provided one of the
early elaborated psychological conceptions of beliefs, in which they suggested that
the political, economical, and social beliefs of an individual often form a broad
coherent system that expresses the deep, underlying needs of that individual's
personality. In their study, these psychologists focused on anti-Semitic and fascistic
beliefs. They found that these beliefs serve needs of inner structure. In a similar
direction, a number of studies have shown that political beliefs serve psychological
needs. That is, political beliefs are functional to various psychological needs. Therefore, individuals with certain psychological characteristics may hold certain political beliefs (see a collection of articles by DiRenzo, 1974).
Sarnoff (1960) suggested that attitudes playa functional role in reducing tension
aroused as a result of activated motives. Specifically, he suggested that individuals
develop their attitudes in the process of tension reduction. '~n individual's attitude
toward a class of objects is determined by the particular role these objects have come
to play in facilitating responses which reduce the tension of particular motives and
which resolve particular conflicts among motives" (p. 261).
Smith, Bruner, and White (1956), who attempted to relate concepts of attitudes
and opinions to personality, proposed three functions that these concepts serve for
individuals:
1. objects appraisal function, which refers to the usefulness of orienting individuals
in the environment, since opinions and/or attitudes allow classification of objects
and raise intentions to behave;
Characteristics of Beliefs
19
2. social adjustment junction , which refers to facilitation, maintenance, and disruption of social relationships, since attitudes help individuals either to be accepted
into a group or to maintain their independence from the group; and
3. externalization junction, which refers to ego protection from anxiety generated
by inner problems, since opinions and/or attitudes allow individuals to externalize various problems.
One of the proponents of the functional theory of attitudes is Daniel Katz, who
suggested that "the functional approach is the attempt to understand the reasons
people hold the attitudes they do. The reasons, however, are at the level of psychological motivations and not at the accidents of external events and circumstances"
(Katz, 1960, p. 170). Katz proposed the four following functions that attitudes may
serve:
1. The instrumental, adjustive, or utilitarian junction , which refers to satisfaction of
needs. Individuals hold attitudes in order to get rewards and avoid punishments.
2. The ego defensive junction, which refers to protection from threats or unacceptable impulses. Individuals hold attitudes in order to protect their egos from unacceptable information about self and certain realities in the external world.
3. The value expressive junction, which refers to the positive expression of one's
central values. Individuals hold attitudes that express personal values and are
important for the self-concept.
4. The knowledge junction, which refers to an adequate structure of everything
individuals know. People hold attitudes since attitudes provide meaning, understanding, and organization of their world.
20
1. Nature of Beliefs
person. Functionality of beliefs has been suggested to be a very important characteristic. It plays a determinative role in beliefs' change (see, for example, Bar-Tal, D.,
1989a; Bar-Tal, D., Kruglanski, & Klar, 1989).
In sum, as already indicated, the described characteristics of beliefs are not stable.
They may change from time to time, or from situation to situation. This is not to say
that they necessarily have to change, but the conception suggests a fluid structure of
beliefs and their characteristics. It is recognized that the belief system is dynamic.
Changes take place continuously. However, changes are dependent on various factors, such as a beliefs structure, a person's cognitive abilities and motivation, and
availability of information. Beliefs that were considered as facts can change and
become hypotheses. Beliefs may even disappear from the cognitive repertoire, since
the individual may lose minimum confidence in them and substitute them with
others. Beliefs such as "China is the United States' enemy;' "The New York Stock
market will not crash in 1987," or "The sun surrounds the earth" are only a few examples of the above described changes. Obviously, a change may occur in the opposite
direction as well. Beliefs that were never in the cognitive repertoire may become
absolute truth, and past hypotheses may turn into facts. "Smoking causes cancer," "It
is possible to fly over the Atlantic" or "Egypt and Israel will sign a peace agreement"
are examples of changes in this direction. Also, beliefs that were obscure may
become central (e.g., 'l\.IDS is transferred through sexual relations"), and beliefs
that were central may almost never become accessible again (e.g., "Japan is at war
with us").
Finally, it should be stressed that even when individuals hold the same beliefs, the
beliefs' characteristics may differ. The different experiences that individuals have,
their different cognitive abilities, and motivations are responsible to a large extent
for these individual differences. However, groups of individuals do hold the same
beliefs characterized in the same way. As proposed, human beings who live in
groups go through similar patterns of socialization, receive the same information,
and often have the same or similar experiences. Thus, it is not surprising that members of the same group, and even members of different groups, also share the same
beliefs. It is the focus of this book to discuss those beliefs that are shared by group
members and considered by them to characterize their group.
Summary
This chapter outlines the epistemological foundations for the present belief conception. The conception draws its basis from the nonjustificational approach to science,
which suggests that all human beliefs are uncertain and conjectural. Their verification depends on the theories held by individuals; therefore, scientists, as all other
persons, can not only focus on the limited features oftheir environment, but can also
examine the rationality of scientific propositions only by testing the consistency
between the newly formed idea, or collected observation, and the held knowledge.
In this framework, beliefs, viewed as units of knowledge, are defined as propositions to which a person attributes at least a minimal degree of confidence. There are
Summary
21
many characteristics of beliefs, but the ones that are of special importance for the
present analysis are: confidence, centrality, interrelationship, and functionality.
Confidence differentiates beliefs on the basis of truth attributed to them; centrality
characterizes the extent of beliefs' accessibility in individuals' repertoire and their
use in various considerations that individuals make; interrelationship indicates the
extent to which the belief is related to other beliefs; functionality differentiates
beliefs on the basis ofthe needs that they fulfill.
In general, beliefs are of unlimited contents, are held by different individuals who
attribute even to the same belief different levels of truth, change in the degree of the
truth ascribed to them, and are organized along with interrelated beliefs into systems. The study of beliefs is one of the focuses of social scientists, especially social
psychologists, who have devoted much effort to studying acquisition and chllnge of
beliefs, their structure, their contents, and their effects mainly on individuals' affect
and behavior. This is so, because individuals, not groups, hold beliefs, although
group members share the same beliefs.
In the past, the study of shared beliefs preoccupied social scientists. Therefore,
before turning to the present conception, which deals with shared beliefs that
characterize a group, a short historical review of the preoccupation with shared
beliefs in the early days of behavioral sciences is presented. This review provides an
historical perspective for the framework later suggested.
Chapter 2
24
4. Folk psychology maintains that individuals living in the same society develop
common culture in the form of similar ideas as expressed in art, morality, law,
folklore, etc. (e.g., Judd, 1926; Wundt, 1916).
5. Cultural determinism, a somewhat similar approach, focuses on common cultural
factors as the determinants of human behavior (e.g., White, 1949).
6. Collective representations proposes that individuals, because of their association,
form collective thoughts and behaviors that exist independently of any single person. These collective representations are beyond personal consciousness (e.g.,
Durkheim, 1898).
7. The common and reciprocal segments of behavior approach indicates that social
institutions are abstractions of the behavior and consciousness of individuals
(e.g., McDougall, 1920).
Within the framework of this approach, McDougall suggested the concept group
mind, which indicates that highly organized human societies acquire an organized
system of mental or purposive forces that are largely independent of the qualities of
the group members. This concept received much attention and stirred up considerable controversy. It has become a frame of reference for any conception that mentions
group cognitive activity or group ideas.
The present analysis classifies the various contributions to group cognitive activities, which appeared with the emergence of psychology, into two categories. One
category consists of conceptions that viewed the formation and existence of a
group's mental products as independent of individuals who constitute the group. The
other category consists of contributions that suggested that a group's mental
products are formed, shared, and bound to the influence processes within the group.
The first category views the contents of common beliefs as predetermined and
independent of the wills or desires of group members, whereas the second category
considers belief contents to be affected by the social processes of the individuals
who constitute the group. Thus, the differentiating criterion is whether beliefs
shared by group members have a superindividual integrity, irrespective of what the
specific individuals who comprise the group do, or whether the shared beliefs are
the products of continuous social influence processes through which the contents of
beliefs and the extent of dissemination are determined.
25
collective ideas, which include such topics as religion, justice, and feelings. Collective representations are part of conscious awareness of human beings. But Jung
directed his attention to the collective unconscious, which individuals carry in addition to personal unconscious:
In addition to our immediate consciousness, which is of a thoroughly personal
nature and which we believe to be the only empirical psyche (even if we tack on the
personal unconscious as an appendix), there exists a second psychic system of a collective, universal, and impersonal nature which is identical in all individuals. This
collective unconscious is not developed individually but is inherited. It consists of
pre-existing forms, the archetypes, which can only become conscious secondarily
and which can give definite form to certain psychic contents. [Jung, 1959, p. 3]
26
This conception implies a mental unity of a mass, which is defined by the uniformity of ideas and feelings.
Specifically, Le Bon compares the state of individuals in a crowd with the hypnosis state. They lose their own unique and independent personalities, bending in the
direction of contagious and common behavior, guided by unconscious motives,
driven by emotional and instinctual impulses. In these situations, the group has
complete power over the individual, who succumbs to group impulses: "His ideas
and feelings have undergone a transformation, and the transformation is so profound
as to change the miser into a spendthrift" (p. 13). In these situations, individuals
think and do things that would be unthinkable when in isolation. They gain new
qualities. The crowd returns to primitivism and to intellectual inferiority by reasoning through images, being driven by emotions, and being motivated by instincts.
Freud's Group Psychology
Freud's book Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego (1960) is one of the
early systematic analyses of group behavior. Drawing upon the ideas of Le Bon and
27
McDougall and using his own concepts from individual psychology, Freud recognized that an individual, "as a member of a race, of a nation, of a caste, of a profession, of an institution, or a component part of a crowd;' behaves differently from
individuals in isolation. In a group, social anxiety, which is the essence of conscience, disappears; as a result, all that has been repressed can uninhibitedly appear
in behavior.
Freud accepted Le Bon's comparison of the individual's behavior in a group to hypnotic influence, but in contrast to Le Bon, Freud did not think that individuals
exhibit new special qualities in group behavior. According to him, individuals in
group situations free themselves from their inhibitions. "When individuals come
together in a group all their individual inhibitions fall away and all the cruel, brutal
and destructive instincts, which lie dormant in individuals as relics of a primitive
epoch are stirred up to find free gratification" (p. 15). However, according to Freud,
groups are also capable of unselfishness and devotion to an ideal. Moral behavior of
group members can be improved, but intellectual behavior cannot. Groups demand
illusions, not truth. Their behavior depends on leaders, since groups have a need for
leaders and a thirst for obedience.
Following McDougall, Freud accepts the notion that highly organized groups
develop collective mental lives. However, he suggests that it takes place as a result
of the members' effort to "equip the group with the attributes of the individual" in
order to make the group unique and distinctive. Freud proposed that the underlying
basis for the mental changes is libido, the energy that expresses love. The libido
holds the group together and serves as a basis for its behavior.
But this type of object-cathexis, based on sexuality, is not the only kind of emotional tie in a group. Identifications between group members, and between the
leader and members, are also possible. The process of identification is essential for
group formation. It implies that group members put "one and the same object in the
place of their ego ideal and have consequently identified themselves with one
another in their ego" (p. 47). This process provides the bond for group relations.
Judd's Social Consciousness
Judd (1926), while recognizing the individual's personal tendencies, focused especially on the common products of group members' activity called social consciousness. Social consciousness, which is always a result of group action, is expressed
through common social institutions. Institutions reflect a cooperative effort of
group members. They exist beyond the specific individuals and characterize a particular group by reflecting, for example, its language or government. If one needs
the definition of a social group, "one may think of it as a collection of human
individuals which is capable of setting up an institution. A group can effectively
establish its institutions only on the basis of its consciousness and will. The institutions are as manifold as the needs of the group cooperation" (p. 76). Through careful
guidance by adults, children develop social consciousness. Group members are
pressed to conform to customs and practices implied by the social consciousness.
Thus individuals behave according to customs and practices not originated by them.
28
Judd believed that the ability to create social consciousness is a great achievement
of the human race. This achievement made human evolution unique:
... the accumulation of experience from generation to generation through social
institutions has brought into the world a new order of reality. Institutions are crystallized ideas. They make possible the transmission of ideas. They are detached
from the minds in which they originated and are capable of affecting other minds.
(p. 17)
29
of relations between the social minds of group members. The concept of group mind
refers to the continuity and existence of the group despite turnover of the membership. It corresponds to the idea of shared sentiments, thoughts, and traditions. It
"consists of the same stuff as individual minds ... but the parts in the several
individual minds reciprocally imply and complement one another and together
make up the system which consists wholly of them" (p. 11).
McDougall recognized that group mind does not exist over and above the minds
of the group members. It "only exists in the minds of the members." But, he argues,
it exists "over and above any sum of those minds created by mere addition" (p. 26).
He suggested five conditions for high-level mental life:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
In the 1939 publication of his book, McDougall clarified his position, directing it
toward a second category of conceptions. He proposed that the concept group mind
expresses the Gestaltist notion that the whole is more than the sum of its parts and
that the understanding of the whole requires laws or principles that cannot be
arrived at by the study of the parts alone. This view
recognizes the organization of the group mind as consisting in the similarities of the
structure of the individual minds (similarities that render them capable of responding in similar fashion to the common features of the environment, both social and
physical) and in those mutual adaptations of individual minds which render them
capable of harmonious cooperation and reciprocal supplementation in their efforts
towards the realization of a common goal. (p. xv)
Group mind, which appears in societies that have long life and are highly
organized, consists of moral, aesthetic, and intellectual traditions that the society
accumulates as it develops and molds the individual mind. "Each member of the
group so moulded bears within him some part of the group mind, some socially
moulded mental structure that is part of the total structure of the group mind" (p.
xvi). In other words, it is an organized system of mental or purposive forces that
have tendencies, a power of molding individuals, and a power of perpetuating itself
as a self-identical system that gradually changes and has life of its own. This structure is independent of the qualities of the individuals who are its group members. It
constitutes a whole system composed of the minds of individuals that reciprocate
and complement one another. Thus, group mind exists in the minds of the members
as a collective, but does not exist in total in the mind of anyone of them.
Durkheim's Collective Representations
Durkheim discusses collectively shared cognitive products labeled as collective
representations, which consist of "the totality of beliefs and sentiments common to
average members of the same society" (Durkheim, 1933, p. 79). This system has its
own life. Though it is realized only in individuals, it is a type of psychic society, a
30
type that has its own properties, conditions of existence, and mode of development.
Durkheim (1953) suggested that collective representations are the customs, traditions, values, ideas, and other elements of society that take shape historically in
human culture and form the milieu in which the individual is socialized and educated. In this respect, they are the perceptions and ideological interpretations of
social and cultural phenomena, and serve as the mode of explanation and justification in the society.
Thus, collective representations can be viewed as the emergent products of social
life that are shared by participants in a collective. Specifically, although they stem
from the substratum brain cells of associated individuals, they can neither be
reduced to nor wholly explained by features of individuals: They have sui generis
characteristics. In other words, collective representations exist independently of
specific individuals. As Durkheim (1953) explained,
When we said elsewhere that social facts are in a sense independent of individuals
and exterior to individual minds, we only affirmed of the social world what we have
just established for the psychic world. Society has for its substratum, the mass of
associated individuals. The system which they form by uniting together and which
varies according to their geographical disposition, and the nature and number of
their channels of communication, is the base from which social life is raised. If
there is nothing extraordinary in the fact that individual representations, produced
by the action and reaction between neural elements, are not inherent in these elements, there is nothing surprising in the fact that collective representations
produced by the action and reaction between individual minds that form the society, do not derive directly from the latter and consequently surpass them.
(p.24-25)
Furthermore, according to Durkheim (1933), collective representations have distinctive qualitative features, which differ from individuals' representations. Collective rules enjoy the moral prestige that individuals spontaneously associate with all
collectively shared beliefs; because these norms are invariably imposed upon the
individual by public opinion, they engender sentiments that are qualitatively different from those evoked by individual representations. As a result, collective norms
have an intensity and compelling force that far exceed those of privately formulated
rules. Individuals assume that they are derived from and enforced by some power,
real or ideal, that is superior to themselves. In this respect, collective representations are sources of legitimization for institutional practices and actual
behavior in society. They provide communal identity and similarity, which, in turn,
serve as a basis for solidarity (Durkeim, 1951).
Social psychologists are currently actively engaged in pursuing Durkheim's conception of collective representation, which is one of the few past contributions to be
revived in the present time. This revival has been accomplished by Moscovici, who
introduced the conception of social representation on the basis of Durkheim's work
(e.g., Farr and Moscovici, 1984; Moscovici, 1961, 1984). However, because Moscovici's conception is greatly influenced by modern social psychology, it is typical
of the present approaches of constructionistic knowledge. According to Moscovici
(1984), social representations denote shared beliefs, images, and affects that persons in a particular society hold. In other words, they reflect the knowledge that
31
individuals in the particular group acquire and communicate. They "are phenomena
which need to be described, and to be explained. They are specific phenomena
which are related to a particular mode of understanding and of communicating - a
mode which creates both reality and common sense" (Moscovici, 1984, p. 19). In
this respect, social representations bridge the gap between individual and societal
realities by providing a framework of social, intragroup understanding. On this
basis, group members can understand each other and communicate with each other.
This view implies that, on the one hand, the knowledge embedded in social
representations is dynamic because it may change and/or disappear. On the other
hand, however, this knowledge is essential for group functioning, unifying the group
or the society and allowing the collective to operate as a system.
Thomas' Definition of the Situation
Thomas (1917, 1951) discussed group cognitive activity from the perspective of the
common definition of the group situation. According to Thomas, groups develop
their own definitions of situations, which reflect their unique view of the world.
Group members internalize these definitions through the process of socialization.
Only on the basis of agreement between group members regarding the definitions
can a social life in a group take place. This is a prerequisite for group functioning.
Indeed, in most cases, individuals learn to define situations in group terms so that
behavior conforms to social norms. When the agreement between the collective
definition ceases, extreme disorganization may occur, which often causes the
general decay of all the group institutions.
In the classic analysis of Polish peasants, Thomas and Znaniecki (1958) suggested
a framework for understanding group behavior. In their analysis, the concepts of
values and attitudes are of special importance. A value is a "social datum" that serves
as an object of meaningful and useful activity to members of a social group, such as
food, money, or ideas. An attitude is an individual's acquired orientation toward a
value, for example, fear, devotion, or hunger. Group members form common attitudes and values as a result of the common conditions in which they live. According
to Thomas and Znaniecki, social psychologists study attitudes in relation to historically specific values, especially toward rules-values whose purpose is to regulate
the individual's relations to the group. These values are shared and provide the basis
for common group activity:
the field of social psychology practically comprises first of all, the attitudes that are
more or less generally found among the members of the social group, have a real
importance in the life-organization of the individuals who have developed them,
and manifest themselves in the social activities of these individuals. (p. 30)
32
time an idea or a wish with a great number of other men" (p. 278). Thus, groups are
formed on the basis of shared beliefs and desires, which constitute social reality for
group members and form mental cohesion. "This reality changes by imperceptible
nuances, but this does not preclude that from the variants there emerges a collective
result which is almost constant" (p. 115).
Tarde did not accept the existence of collective consciousness beyond that of individuals. He suggested that group thoughts (e.g., moral maxims, religious rites) are
transferred from one individual to another (mostly from parents, teachers, or
peers). The basic process through which the beliefs are transferred among the group
members is imitation (Tarde, 1907).
According to Tarde, every group act implies an imitative relationship among
group members. This process enables a formation of commonality and sharing the
same beliefs and desires. Furthermore, he recognized the importance of mass media
(Le., journalism) for the dissemination of some ideas to large populations. In his
opinion, such disseminations allow for the formation of large associations.
Bekhterev's Collective Reflexology*
Bekhterev (1921) tried to introduce objective analysis to the issues of collective
actions and reactions without resorting to subjective interpretations. He based this
analysis on reflexology, a scientific discipline that he attempted to develop. In his
view, it is possible to explain much of collective behavior within the framework of
collective reflexology. Collective behavior, like individual behavior, is an outcome of
specific conditions in the environment and biological bases. In our case, the conditions in the environment pertain to tradition and social standards that provide the
framework for social behavior. Thus, collective reflexology can explain "manifestations of correlative activity of a whole group of people and their external responses
under certain conditions:'
Of special importance for the present review is Bekhterev's concept of correlative
activity (Le., neuropsychological activity), which he used in reflexology to describe
mental activity, but defined as the sum of higher, or associative, reflexes. (Associative
reflexes develop on the basis of common reflexes, which are purely biological.) According to Bekhterev, the group affects individuals' correlative activity through interpersonal communications. In this process, collective correlative activity evolves that
is based on unifying elements such as "common mood, joint observation, collective
concentration and decision, joint decision making, and shared goals and activity:'
The products of collective correlative activity "are based exclusively on individual
mental processes;' but groups establish mental unity. Group members influence
each other and new mental content is added to the individual's repertoire. These
additions are common to group members. The final product leads to an "amalgamation" of the mental unity rather than to a formation of "a single collective soul:'
Nevertheless, the outputs of collective correlative activity reveal characteristics that
cannot be found in an individual's private repertoire.
*Special thanks are granted to Lloyd Strickland who directed my attention to Bekhterev's
ideas and provided the translations of his work.
Summary
33
Summary
The preoccupation with group cognitive activity in the early days of social psychology did not continue into the present. With the exception of "collective representations;' other concepts including "group mind" have not been accepted by the social
psychologists and the study of common beliefs has not been pursued. Neither group
students nor social cognition specialists have been interested in group cognitive
products. Referring to the concept "group mind;' G. Allport (1968) stated, "Probably
it is regrettable that the concept was ever used by anyone. We see now that it has
unnecessarily imposed metaphysical blocks in the path of constructive conceptualization" (p. 55). With few exceptions, social psychologists through the years have
studied cognitive processes of individuals and have abandoned their earlier preoccupation with group cognitive activities (Graumann & Moscovici, 1986).
The present contribution focuses on specific mental products of group members,
namely group beliefs (i.e., beliefs that are shared and believed to characterize the
group). In light of the presented review, it is necessary to stress that the present conception of group beliefs suggests that they exist in individuals' minds. The conception
does not suggest that we should view group beliefs as a special superexistential entity
of the group. Beliefs are held by individuals. Organizations, societies, or any other
groups do not hold beliefs on the collective level-only individual members in the
aggregate groups do. However, the present conception describes a widely recognized
phenomenon that group members share beliefs that may come to be viewed as the
defining essence of that group. Sharing indicates neither that group beliefs are supernatural concepts nor that they exist outside of individuals. It merely means that group
members hold the same beliefs due to similar experiences, exposure to common contents, and the influence of social processes. Group beliefs are imparted to new group
members through conventional socialization systems. But group members may at any
time revise the group beliefs by adding, changing, or subtracting beliefs. Members are
not passive carriers of group beliefs, but rather active transmitters who may formulate
and reformulate group beliefs. Group beliefs thus are not stable. Their contents
depend on the specific composition of group members and their experiences.
Chapter 3
The present conception differentiates among three type of beliefs: personal beliefs,
common beliefs, and group beliefs. Personal beliefs are those beliefs that individuals
perceive as being uniquely their own. These beliefs are not perceived as being
shared. Rather, they are believed to be formed by the individuals themselves, and
as long as they are not shared, they are considered to be private repertoire. Personal
beliefs distinguish individuals from one another by characterizing them as unique
persons.
Beliefs that are shared are called common beliefs. In these cases, individuals
believe that their beliefs are also held by other individuals. Common beliefs can be
shared by a small group of family members, friends, members of an organization,
members of a society, members of a religion, and even by the majority of human
beings. From a specific individual's perspective, common beliefs can be acquired
from external sources or formed by himself/herself and later disseminated among
other people.
With regard to the former way of acquisition, individuals are aware that their
beliefs are shared by other people, since they acquire them from external sources
such as other individuals, books, television, radio, or newspapers. Moreover, certain societal institutions, such as mass media or schools, are established in order
to provide group members with information that serves as common beliefs. The
latter method indicates that individuals create ideas of their own through mental
processes labeled as impressions, judgments, inferences, attributions, evaluation,
etc., and later share these ideas with other individuals. In turn, the other individuals
may adopt these beliefs into their own repertoire of beliefs. In these cases, an
individual's personal beliefs disseminate and become common beliefs. All of the
shared beliefs, which are not based on experience but on inference, originate from
one or several individuals.
One of the most obvious categories of common beliefs is the one that pertains to
so-called scientific beliefs that are accepted as facts, such as "The earth revolves
around the sun;' "Caesar ruled in Rome;' "Washington is the capital of the United
States;' or "Water is a combination of hydrogen and oxygen molecules." Another
36
category refers to experiential beliefs that describe the nature of physical reality,
such as "This is a tree;' "We sit at a desk," or "It rains." There are no limitations
on the subject of common beliefs (see Fletcher, 1984) or the extent of their dissemination.
Of special importance for the present conception are those common beliefs shared
by members of the same group. These beliefs are prerequisites for the formation of
a social system, and anthropologists advance the idea that a culture may be viewed
as a system of common beliefs (e.g., Df\ndrade, 1984; Dougherty, 1985). Parsons
(1951) argued that "the sharing of common belief system is a condition of the full
integration of a system of social interactions" (p. 352). Common beliefs within a
group provide the basis that allows group members to maintain their social structure
by enabling communication, awareness of similarity, development of interdependence, and coordination of group activity. In this vein, for example, Salisbury
(1975) pointed out that what is important in a group, at least from a political point
of view, is a display of common attitudes or values. "It is the shared attitudes rather
than the shared social characteristics which are important" (p. 174) because on their
basis group members develop political identity that leads to political action.
The view that groups, through complex interaction between human experiences
and intellectual ideas, form belief systems shared by group members has been supported by many social thinkers, including Karl Mannheim, Karl Marx, and Emile
Durkheim. These thinkers also realized that the shared beliefs that constitute a
group's belief system cannot be reduced to the sum of the properties of personal
beliefs. Belief systems in their totality perform important functions in a group's life
(e.g., Borhek & Curtis, 1975; Parsons, 1951).
37
formation and, later, as a bond for group existence. "We are exploited," "Communism is the best system for human beings;' "Jesus is God's son;' or "Iraq is our
enemy" are examples of possible group beliefs.
In fact, group beliefs serve as a raison d'etre for a collective of individuals to label
themselves as group members and to view the entity as a group. '~are a group" is
the fundamental group belief If individuals do not share this belief, then they do not
consider themselves to be as group members. Only individuals' awareness that they
are group members determines the group's existence for them. (It should be stressed
that even when the outside world treats individuals as a group and perceives them
as such, the beliefs of these individuals will determine their own reality. If they
accept the beliefs of the external world, then their beliefs may change and they may
begin to believe that they are a group. But, sometimes, in spite of the common treatment and beliefs of the external world, the individuals may not see themselves as a
group). Once the group exists in the individuals' worlds, they can psychologically
relate to group characteristics in the form of additional group beliefs. That is, in
addition to the fundamental belief "We are a group;' group members may share
beliefs of various contents pertaining to a variety of other subjects. These beliefs
define the uniqueness of the collective of individuals who consider themselves to be
a group and serve as anchors for the construction of a coherent system of orientation
about the group.
Several examples of group beliefs are provided to illustrate the nature of this concept. In pre-war Japan, and still to a large extent today, part of the Japanese group
beliefs concerned the Emperor. The Emperor was believed to be the symbol of the
Japanese people, the origin of all morality. Those were shared, unique, beliefs that
characterized and, to some extent, still characterize Japanese people. A Japanese
document entitled Cardinal Principles of the National Entity of Japan explicitly
reflects these group beliefs. In the description of identity and solidarity among various symbols and values, it refers to common history ("The great august Will of the
Emperor in the administration of the nation is constantly cleady reflected in our history"), to the Emperor ("the Emperor, venerating in person the divine spirits of the
Imperial Ancestors, increasingly becomes one in essence with Imperial Ancestry"),
and to the value of loyalty ("loyalty means to revere the Emperor as our pivot and
to follow him implicitly").
Group beliefs may also be derived from historical events. In this vein, Verba
(1965) pointed out that a set of historical events largely determines national identity.
The 1917 Bolshevik revolution in Russia and the Mexican revolution in 1910 can be
evaluated from this perspective. Both events represent a break with the past and an
opening of a new era for the two nations. These two revolutions raised new ideals
and goals that the Russians and Mexicans still try to achieve. The beliefs in the significance and positiveness of these events are symbolic; they unify and define the
essence of the emerged societies. The beliefs that their revolutions were historical
turning points that created new and better societies are group beliefs of both Russians and Mexicans.
Another example of group beliefs can be drawn from the two struggling communities in Northern Ireland. The Protestant community bases its "groupness" on several
38
sets of group beliefs (Roberts, 1971). One set pertains to beliefs regarding the group's
"Britishness." The group's loyalty to the Queen and Britain provides group members
with special identity in Northern Ireland and differentiates them from the Catholic
community. Another set concerns past victories at Derry, Aughrim, and the Boyne,
which are linked with the name of William III, Prince of Orange. Finally, the third
set of beliefs concerns the religious Protestant content. The Catholic community, on
the other hand, maintains group beliefs that refer to its Celtic origin, its willingness
to be part of the Irish Republic, and the religious content of Catholicism (Barritt &
Carter, 1972).
The Ras Tafari movement, which originated in 1930, in Jamaica, provides an
additional example of group beliefs. The basic group beliefs refer to Haile Selassi,
the late Emperor of Ethiopia (previously named Ras Tafari), as the living god, view
Blacks as true Israelites, and consider the life of the Blacks in British West India as
hopeless. In addition, Marcus Garvey, the founder of the movement, who supposedly was sent by Ras Tafari and who disseminated the group beliefs, also spread out
the idea that whereas heaven is an invention of the white man, the real heaven is
Ethiopia and therefore Blacks should return there (Simpson, 1955).
The principal group beliefs ofthe John Birch Society, founded in 1958, refer to the
opposition to Communism. The beliefs refer to the evilness of this system and
declare a war with it.
We believe that the Communists seek to drive their slaves and themselves along
exactly the opposite and downward direction, to the Satanic debasement of both
man and his universe. We believe that Communism is as utterly incompatible with
all religion as it is contemptuous of all morality and destructive of all freedom. It
is "intrinsically evil." It must be opposed, therefore, with equal firmness, on religious grounds, moral grounds, and political grounds. We believe that the continued
coexistence of Communism and a Christian-style civilization on one planet is
impossible. The struggle between them must end with one completely triumphant
and the other completely destroyed. We intend to do our part, therefore, to halt,
weaken, rout, and eventually to bury, the whole International Communist Conspiracy. (Welch, 1973, p. 299)
Other group beliefs of the John Birch Society relate to the support of patriotism and
a constitutional republic, as well as the rejection of collectivism and the expansion
of governmental power (Welch, 1973).
The last two examples illustrate the possible variety of the contents of group
beliefs. On the basis of Levy's (1975) detailed analysis of Lubovitcher Hassidim's
ethnic identification, it is possible to suggest that the basic group belief of this Jewish religious group is that their Rabbi (Rebbe) personifies all of their core values.
This is the Lubovitcher Hassidim's most distinctive group belief, setting the group
apart from other Hassidic groups. Also, Thompson and Peterson's (1975) description indicates that the basic group belief of the Choctaw Indians in Mississippi refers
to speaking the Choctaw language. As the tribal chairman said, "If he speaks Choctaw, he's Choctaw."
39
40
Finally, in their classic book Group Dynamics, Cartwright and Zander (1968)
provided a list of group characteristics that are included in the various definitions
proposed by different theorists. The list indicates that five out of ten characteristics
may be seen as referring to group beliefs as follows: " ... (b) they define themselves
as members," " ... (d) they share norms concerning matters of common interest,"
" ... (f) they identify with one another as a result of having set up the same modelobject or ideals in their super-ego;''' ... (h) they pursue promotively interdependent
goals," and "0) they have a collective perception of their unity" (p. 48).
The subjective perspective used to define a group is not limited to a definition of
small groups, but can also be used to define macro groups such as social movements,
ethnic groups, societies, or nations.
Thus, Krech and Crutchfield (1948), who differentiated between social groups
(informal entities of relatively small size and short duration) and social organizations, defined the latter concept as "specific groupings of actual people, which are
characterized by the possession of the following: (1) cultural products (such as buildings, robes, prayers, magic, formulas, songs); (2) a collective name or symbol; (3)
distinctive action patterns; (4) a common belief system; and (5) enforcing agents or
techniques" (p. 369). Similarly, Killian (1964) suggested four characteristics to
define a large group constituting a social movement. Three of them referred to
shared beliefs:
1. The existence of shared values - a goal or an objective, sustained by an ideology.
2. A sense of membership or participation-a "we-ness", a distinction between
those who are for and those against. 3. Norms-shared understandings as to how
the followers should act, definitions of outgroups and how to behave toward them.
(p. 431)
Shared beliefs were also proposed to define ethnic groups (e.g., Barth, 1969a;
De Vos, 1975). De Vos's definition suggests viewing an ethnic group as a
self-perceived group of people who hold in common a set of traditions shared by the
others with whom they are in contact. Such tradition typically includes "folk" religious beliefs and practices, language, a sense of historical continuity, and common
ancestry or place of origin. (p. 9)
41
It should be noted that not all of the definitions of a group take a subjective perspective. Some definitions provide a so-called "external" or "objective" criterion for
group existence, ignoring shared beliefs of group members. In this category there
are definitions that focus on such organizational characteristics of a group as properties of statuses, roles, and interactions. For example, Stogdill (1959) defined a group
as "an open interaction system in which actions determine the structure of the system
and successive interactions exert coequal effects upon the identity of the system" (p.
18), and Shaw (1976) defined a group "as two or more persons who are interacting
with one another in such a manner that each person influences, and is influenced by
each other person" (p. 11).
The present conception refers to a group as a general concept. The proposed definition states that a group is a collective ofindividuals with a defined sense ofmembership and shared beliefs. including group beliefs; which regulate their behavior at
least in matters related to the collective. This definition encompasses groups ofvarious sizes and kinds including small groups, associations, organizations, political
parties, interest groups, religious denominations, ethnic groups, and even nations.
The three necessary and sufficient conditions for a collective to be a group are: (a)
Individuals in the collective should define themselves as group members; (b) they
should share beliefs. including group beliefs; and (c) there should be some level of
coordinated activity.
It must be realized that the concept group, as used throughout the book, is very
general and encompasses many types of groups. In order to deal with this variety,
social scientists have suggested various categories to classify groups. Cartwright
and Zander (1968) pointed out in this vein that
a common procedure has been to select a few properties and to define "types" of
groups on the basis of whether these properties are present or absent. Among the
properties most often employed are: size (number of members), amount of physical
interaction among members, degree of intimacy, level of solidarity, locus of control
of group activities, extent of formalization of rules governing relations among
members and tendency of members to react to one another as individual persons or
as occupants of roles. Although it would be possible to construct a large number of
types of groups by combining these properties, in various ways, usually only
dichotomies have resulted: formal-informal, primary-secondary, small-large,
Gemeinschaft-Gesellschaft, autonomous-dependent, temporary-permanent, consensual-symbiotic. Sometimes a rather different procedure has been advocated in
which groups are classified according to their objectives or social settings. (p. 24)
Obviously this comprehensive statement does not exhaust all the possible criteria
for group categorization. Nevertheless, from the present perspective all groups have
to have members who perceive themselves as being part of this entity and all of them
have to have group beliefs as partial necessary conditions.
How central the group beliefs are to the members, how much confidence group
members have in them, or how functional they are to the individuals and the group
are questions that are related to various group properties. It is suggested that the
centrality, confidence, and functionality of group beliefs are not necessarily related
to the size of the group. Large groups such as nations, ethnic groups, or religious
denominations, as well as small groups such as professional organizations, sects, or
42
interest groups have group beliefs, which may vary in these characteristics. One significant variable that determines the status of group beliefs is the importance of the
group for group members. Groups are important and group beliefs become central in
group members' repertoire when they satisfy group members' needs. Group beliefs of
small groups as well as large ones can fulfill this function.
The study of group beliefs should not be restricted to specific groups, but should
encompass all types of groups. Their examination not only sheds special light on the
essence of the group phenomenon itself, but also on various group processes and
structures.
With the above point, it should be emphasized that the present view does not suggest viewing a mere self-categorization of individuals as a sufficient condition for
group existence. It differentiates between individuals who classify themselves as a
category and group members who, in addition to self-classification as group members, are also interdependent in their behavior (Horwitz & Rabbie, 1989; Rabbie &
Horwitz, 1988). Although it is recognized that a necessary first step in group formation is self-categorization (which will be discussed later), another necessary condition involves at least some level of coordinated activity, which does not have to
involve face-to-face interaction. According to Rabbie and Horwitz (1988), the
movement from the initial step of self-categorization takes place "when the group is
viewed as a locomoting entity, one that actively moves or passively moves in its
environment toward or away from group harm or benefit" (p. 119).
This conception goes beyond the "mere categorization" condition for group existence as suggested by Tajfel (1981) and Turner (1987). It does recognize the importance of the fundamental group belief, "We are a group," for group formation. But,
at the same time, it suggests that in order for a category of individuals to become a
group, there is a need to form additional group beliefs that define the nature of the
"groupness" and to develop a coordinated activity that reflects interdependence. The
latter condition is based on Lewin's (1951) conception of a group, which proposed
that a group as a dynamic whole depends on "the interdependence of the members
(or better, of the subparts of the group)" (p. 146).
In conclusion, leaving aside for the didactic purpose the condition of coordinated
activity, the subjective approach to a group suggests that until individuals begin to
believe that they are a group, they are not-at least in accordance to their own reality. Thus, individuals may be perceived as acting as a group and be labeled as such
by various individuals and groups, but as long as they do not perceive themselves as
a group, they are not, in their eyes. A group exists for these individuals only if it
exists in their phenomenological field. This approach focuses, as will be described
later, on a sequence of processes leading from experiences through perception to
self-categorization as a group.
Accordingly, there might be disagreement between beliefs. A collective of
individuals may consider themselves as a group, while observers may disagree with
this perception. Conversely, observers may consider a collective of individuals to be
a group, while the individuals perceived to be a group may not think so. The question can thus be raised: In which perspective is one interested? Since, according to
the philosophical foundation presented in the first chapter, beliefs are relative and
subjective, the answer depends on the object of the inquiry. If one is interested in
43
studying the phenomenology of the individuals constituting the collective, then one
should focus the inquiry on their beliefs. This approach has many theoretical bases,
but one assumption related to this direction of inquiry has special importance for
understanding group behavior: namely, that individuals act consistently with their
beliefs (e.g., Brunswick, 1956; Heider, 1958; Krech & Crutchfield, 1948). Thus,
individuals' perception of whether they are a group or not determines to a large
extent their behavior.
An interesting point was raised by Tajfel (1981) with regard to "objective" and
"subjective" definitions. He noted that the "outside objective and uncommitted"
observers and group members may use similar "tools" to establish group characteristics and boundaries. "But" -as Tajfel rightly suggestedthe criteria for accepting the validity of one construction or another may differ
vastly between those who engage in the "outside" construction for their professional
(scientific) purposes and those inside the system who need guidelines for their
behavior and thus attempt to construct a coherent system of orientation in their
social environment. (p. 46)
The belief "We are a group" is part of the reality of the individuals who constitute
a group. For them, the group is real. They talk, feel, behave, and form other beliefs
in the framework of the group that exists for them. They use the terms "we;' "our
group;' "other groups." They see the forest (the Gestalt) and not only the trees.
Therefore, group members refer to common activities, goals, past, interdependence, etc., and act accordingly. The most important implication derived from the
subjective definition for the present analysis is that groups do have group beliefs that
constitute their essential characteristics. In other words, as indicated earlier, the
subjective approach indicates that a collective of individuals has to have at least one
group belief stating "We are a group" as a first step to consider itself as a group.
Nevertheless, groups usually have more than one group belief. Groups may have
numerous group beliefs pertaining to many different contents.
The existence of beliefs shared by group members, who are aware of this fact, and
the implications of this phenomenon for the lives of group members stress the
necessity to focus on the study of these beliefs. Such direction of interest should
include all the themes that have fascinated social psychologists in their investigation
of personal beliefs-that is, the acquisition, characteristics, function, structure,
influence on individual and group behavior, and antecedents of group beliefs. All of
these topics are subjects of this book.
44
A study by Deconchy (1984) provides a good example of how group beliefs may
be investigated, although the investigator had different objectives and did not report
the results, which are of interest for the present purpose. The study concerned group
beliefs of the Catholic Church and was carried out among representatives of the
Catholic Church system (priests, teachers of catechism, monks, nuns, and seminarians). The participants in the study were presented with 18 propositions, which
either expressed classic shared beliefs of the group or contradicted them in an
ambiguous way. The respondents were asked to sort the propositions into the following four categories: (1) "I believe it, and all those who wish to be members of
my Church must also believe it"; (2) "I believe it, but someone who does not could
still be a member of my Church"; (3) "I do not believe it, but someone who does
could still be a member of my Church"; and (4) "I do not believe it and someone who
does could not be, in any circumstances, a member of my Church:' The described
method of this study pertains to the basic function of group beliefs - demarcation of
group boundaries.
The question of measuring shared beliefs in a group is not unique to the specific
problem of assessing group beliefs. Political scientists, sociologists, and psychologists have tried to measure categories of shared beliefs that may be considered as
group beliefs. For example, Szalay and Kelly (1982) provided an example using the
Associative Group Analysis (see Szalay & Deese, 1978) to measure ideology among
different groups. The method is constructed to elicit free verbal association in order
to assess the content of the responses and their frequencies of appearance. In their
first study, Szalay and Kelly (1982) reported the meaning ofthe concepts capitalism,
communism, socialism, and Marxism to a sample of Slovenians in Yugoslavia and
to a sample of Americans. The second study focused on the meaning of the concepts
of democracy and politics to Koreans and Americans.
Another attempt to assess shared belief was done by Jackson (1965). He developed a method to measure the extent of approval or disapproval of a norm by group
members. His method allows the establishment of the degree of consensus and the
intensity of support or disagreement. A number of reported studies show that Jackson and his students were able to measure the characteristics of norms within small
groups and organizations.
One important problem in measuring group beliefs is that group members may
disagree in their reports on which beliefs are included in such a set. Nevertheless,
it is assumed that although group members may not achieve consensus in describing
all of the beliefs, they should be able to point to the most important group beliefs
(i.e., of high centrality) with considerable consensus. In fact, the level of agreement
may serve as one indicator of group belief importance. The degree of consensus that
is reported correlates to the degree of indication that the group belief is basic. Some
beliefs may be more prototypic to group characterization than others.
The extent to which members of a group agree on group beliefs or other shared
information within a group has been of interest for social scientists. For example,
anthropologists Romney, Weller, and Batchelder (1986) developed a formal mathematical model for the analysis of culture knowledge based on the consensus among
group members. The model is based on patterns of agreements among group mem-
45
bers that allow them to make inferences about their differential knowledge of shared
beliefs. Although the model was tested on few respondents, according to the
researchers, it opens the possibility of measuring the "cultural competence of informants in a variety of domains" (p. 323). Within the present framework, it may be
used to assess shared knowledge of group beliefs.
Although group beliefs are part of individuals' cognitive repertoires, they also may
be manifested in various group products. The manifestation can be either implicit
or explicit. In the first case, group beliefs may be inferred from various verbal outputs such as leaders' speeches, documents, or books. Content analysis ofthese outputs may reveal group beliefs. One example of this research direction is Coleman's
(1941) attempt to define the specific characteristics of Americans. He based his
study on content analysis of a random sample of books and periodicals written by
contemporary and earlier authors. The units of analysis were statements that distinctively characterize all the Americans. The final list of American traits on which
most authors agreed consisted of 27 items. Among them were such characteristics
as a belief in democracy, a belief in individualism, a belief in the importance of education, a belief in equality, and a belief that it is a duty and a virtue to make money.
Although the study did not investigate American group beliefs per se, it does suggest
a way of approaching their examination.
The explicit way of manifesting group beliefs indicates that they are formally presented in group products, such as in documents and books. A group may publicize
what is considered to be group beliefs. Many groups publicize their goals, ideology,
history, and so on, which are formally presented as their group beliefs.
In this regard, it should be noted that there may be a lack of correspondence
between group members' reports on what constitutes group beliefs and formal
presentations of group beliefs. A lack of correspondence may be caused by at least
one or more of the following: (a) The formalized presentation of group beliefs
was not updated in view of group belief changes; (b) the presentation indicates
possible future changes in group beliefs, as desired by the leadership; (c) the presentation represents a minority opinion that is not part of the consensus; (d) the
presentation describes a set of beliefs on which there is a disagreement within a
group; or (e) the presentation describes the ideal desired beliefs. Some of these
phenomena will be analyzed in later chapters. Although the definition in this chapter focused on group members' beliefs, the formalized presentation of group beliefs
cannot be underestimated. Since the formalized presentation often serves as a
symbolic representation of the group, the group pays special attention to its content. \
Many of a group's social processes concern formulation and reformulation of these
statements. Moreover, these formulations, as representations of group beliefs, are
the foci around which group change takes place. Mergers or splits in a group, as will
be discussed later, are based on agreements and disagreements with the formalized
group beliefs.
This book relies mostly on formal formulations of group beliefs in written
materials, or their analysis by observers (i.e., social scientists) in the examples
provided, since there is very little available research on group members' reports.
These examples should be viewed as illustrations of the proposed conception.
46
Summary
This chapter introduces the concept of group beliefs as a framework for analyzing
groups. Group members share group beliefs, are aware of this sharing, and believe
that group beliefs define their "groupness." The contents of group beliefs provide the
raison d'etre for a group's existence and delineate its uniqueness vis-a-vis other
groups. The fundamental group belief indicates that the group exists. In addition,
group members may add other group beliefs of a wide scope of contents covering
such themes as the group's common history, ideology, or goals.
Although human beings are members of very different groups, all of them have
group beliefs if they believe that they constitute a group. Since the self-categorization of individuals as group members is considered a necessary condition for
group existence, group beliefs, as characteristics of a collective, are important elements of a group's definition.
In spite of the fact that identifying group beliefs in certain groups is easier than in
others, group beliefs play an important role in every group's life. Group members
themselves should report their group beliefs. But, since it is not possible in every
group to collect these reports, other means of inquiry into group beliefs are suggested. One way of detecting group beliefs is to examine group products, either as
inferences from verbal outputs from various sources such as leaders, or as formally
written presentations in written materials. The next chapter will provide numerous
examples offormally presented beliefs that may be considered as explicit manifestations of group beliefs.
Chapter 4
After the presentation of the conception, this chapter further describes the nature
of group beliefs by providing more examples of possible contents and discussing
their characteristics.
48
The group beliefs of Amalgamated Flying Saucer Clubs of America are stated in
the following way:
We affirm that flying saucers are real, that in reality they are true spacecraft
manned by people from other planets, who are visiting and making contact with
various persons of our planet for the purpose of imparting information which can
be used for the benefit of all men of earth. We deplore the actions of our government
in withholding information on this subject which is so vital to the welfare of our
nation and its people.
(Toch, 1965, p. 24, copied from AFSCA World Report, Amalgamated Flying
Saucer Clubs of America, July-August, 1960)
It can be assumed that group members of each of these groups confidently hold
their group beliefs, which provide identity and characterize their uniqueness.
As was proposed, the fundamental group belief refers to the perceived reality of
the group members, indicating that they are a group. "We are a group" is a necessary
belief for group existence that frames both the personal and group identity. Tajfel
(1981) suggested that this belief may include from one to three components:
A cognitive component, in the sense of the knowledge that one belongs to a group;
an evaluative one, in the sense that the notion of the group and/or of one's membership in it may have a positive or a negative value connotation; and an emotional
component in the sense that the cognitive and evaluative aspects of the group and
one's membership in it may be accompanied by emotions (such as love or hatred,
like or dislike) directed towards one's own group and towards others which stand in
certain relations to it. (p. 229)
On the basis ofthe fundamental group belief, other group beliefs are added. Their
contents may pertain to the totality of group members' lives or refer to a very
specific subject that characterizes the particular group. In the first case, the group
beliefs may cover contents of all the aspects of group members' lives by referring to
a wide range of norms, values, goals, means, and so on. In these groups, members
are required to live a certain life-style as dictated by group beliefs. This is the case,
for example, with certain religious groups (e.g., Amish society or Orthodox Jews)
or with certain ideological groups (e.g., revolutionary groups). In the other case,
group beliefs refer to a narrow aspect of group members' lives and pertain to a
specific content. For example, the content may relate to a particular goal such as
protecting the natural environment (e.g, Sierra Club) or protecting an unborn child's
right to live (e.g,. National Right to Life Committee). Nevertheless, the classification is not dichotomous, but represents a continuum of which the two extreme poles
have been described. Groups differ with regard to the extent to which their group
beliefs cover various aspects of group members' lives.
49
Group beliefs can be divided into different categories. The categories can be based
on various criteria and used for different purposes. In this chapter, as examples of
the wide scope of the possible contents of group beliefs, the following four
categories, which are widely used by behavioral scientists, will be discussed: norms,
values, goals, and ideology. The purpose of this discussion is to show that the concept of group beliefs does not overlap with previously used categories, but provides
a unique perspective for these specific group characteristics. That is, the conception
suggests that these categories may not necessarily serve as group beliefs. Thus, definitions of each category and their implications for the group beliefs' conception will
be presented, including examples of group beliefs in each category.!
Group Norms
Group norms are shared standards that guide group members' behavior (Smelser,
1967). Based on cultural values, tradition, and goals (McCall & Simmons, 1982),
norms tell group members what they should or should not do, prescribing appropriate behavior and indicating inappropriate ones. As Homans (1950) stated, a norm
is "an idea in the minds ofthe members of a group, an idea that can be put in the form
of a statement specifying what the members or other men should do, ought to do, are
expected to do, under given circumstances" (p. 123). Thus, norms regulate group
members' behavior and provide criteria for jUdging it.
Norms, as defined, do not necessarily have to be group beliefs. Norms may regulate group members' behavior without being considered as characteristic of the
specific group. In such groups, group beliefs pertain to contents other than norms.
In other groups, at least part of the norms may define their characteristics and be
group beliefs. Even in these instances, however, not all of the norms may be of equal
importance in defining a group's uniqueness. Nevertheless, when norms function as
group beliefs, group members believe that their patterns of behavior are unique to
them and characterize their membership. Adherence to certain types of food, clothing, observance of rituals, and kinds of interactions differentiates group members
and out-groups.
In an extensive description of Amish society, Hostetler (1968) points out several
norms that can be considered as group beliefs. For example, Amish preaching
prescribes the necessity of separation from the world. Therefore, an Amish man
does not marry a non-Amish woman, does not do business with an outsider, and even
does not enter into intimate relationships with a person outside the Amish community. In addition to norms of separation, the Amish group also perpetuates norms of
IMost of the examples provided in the following review are drawn from formal statements
prepared by the groups. Although it is possible that they reflect the group beliefs, group members were not examined to indicate their responses. Therefore, the presented "group beliefs"
should be treated with caution. They only serve as illustrations for presenting the conception.
Further research among group members may determine the actual status of these beliefs.
50
nonresistance. Group members are forbidden to take part in violence or war, and
they withdraw from conflicts or resistance. They refuse to swear any oath, to bear
arms, or to hold public offices.
Through the ceremony of baptism, adolescents become full members in the
church. From that time, they and other group members are committed to maintaining the rules of the church (Ordnung). The rules are not specified in writing, but they
are known to every group member. They cover the whole range of human
experience. They forbid the use of electricity, telephones, automobiles, or tractors;
they require hooks-and-eyes on dresscoats and the use of horses for farming and
travel. No formal education beyond the elementary grades is a rule of life. The following passage specifies some of the rules:
No ornamental bright, showy form-fitting, immodest or silk-like clothing of any
kind. Colors such as bright red, orange, yellow and pink not allowed. Amish form
of clothing to be followed as a general rule. Costly Sunday clothing to be discouraged. Dresses not shorter than half-way between knees and floor, nor over eight
inches from floor. Longer advisable. Clothing in every way modest, serviceable
and as simple as scripturally possible. Only outside pockets allowed are one on work
eberhem or vomas and pockets on large overcoats. Dress shoes, if any, to be plain
and black only. No high heels and pomp slippers, dress socks, if any, to be black
except white for foot hygiene for both sexes. A plain, unshowy suspender without
buckles.
Hat to be black with no less than 3-inch rim and not extremely high in crown. No
stylish impression in any hat. No pressed trousers. No sweaters.
Prayer covering to be simple, and made to fit head. Should cover all the hair as
nearly as possible and is to be worn wherever possible. [Pleating of caps to be discouraged.] No silk ribbons. Young children to dress according to the Word as well
as parents. No pink or fancy baby blankets or caps.
Women to wear shawls, bonnets, and capes in public. Aprons to be worn at all
times. No adorning of hair among either sex such as parting of hair among men and
curling or waving among women.
A full beard should be worn among men and boys after baptism if possible. No
shingled hair. Length at least half-way below tops of ears.
No decorations of any kind in buildings inside or out. No fancy yard fences.
Linoleum, oilcloth, shelf and wall paper to be plain and unshowy. Over-stuffed
furniture or any lUXUry items forbidden. No doilies or napkins. No large mirrors,
(fancy glassware), statues or wall pictures for decorations. (Hostetler, 1968,
pp.59-6O)
In another example, Ardener (1983) described the group beliefs of Canadian
Doukhobors who emigrated from Russia at the beginning of the twentieth century.
They believe that the Perfect Life is attainable on earth through the rejection of
materialism. They have not recognized human authority structure and therefore are
opposed to state legislation or oath taking. Their uniqueness has been reflected in
deprivation, suffering, and poverty, which became, according to Ardener, part
of their self-definition, corresponding to their identification with Christ himself.
In this vein, to form their own identity, Doukhobors resorted to nudity as a social
artifact for identifying their group and to the use of arson against institutions and
then against their own property. Ardener suggested that both practices helped
51
to maintain the boundary of the group and to enhance solidarity in the face of
outgroups.
Group Values
An analysis similar to the one presented about norms applies to group values.
Groups may hold values, but they do not necessarily have to function as group
beliefs. A value is defined as "an enduring belief that a specific mode of conduct or
end-state of existence is ... socially preferable to an opposite or converse mode of
conduct or end-state of existence" (Rokeach, 1973, p. 5). The former is called an
instrumental value, while the latter is called a terminal value.
Unlike norms, values do not specify particular patterns of behaviors, but they do
provide abstract ideas and long-range concerns, which guide the selection of the
means and ends of specific actions, and serve as criteria by which objects, actions,
or events are evaluated. Thus, individuals may have many norms or attitudes and
few values. Examples of values are freedom, truth, individualism, or equality. They
reflect the ideals to which individuals and groups aspire.
Individuals differ with regard to the values they hold or consider as important.
However, beyond the individual differences, it is possible to characterize groups by
the values that their group members share (Kluckhohn, 1951; Parsons, 1968).
Sociologists have focused on shared values, referring to them as value systems in a
given society. Nevertheless, a given shared value is not necessarily held by every
person in the group. When a sufficient number of group members subscribe to the
value, it may not only characterize the group, but may also become an important
determinant of the group members' behavior.
Williams (1960) suggested some concrete tests of value dominance within a
group. Specifically, he stated that within a group, the dominance of values can be
evaluated according to the following four criteria: (a) extensiveness of the value in
the total activity of the system, measured in terms of the proportion of the population and of its activities that manifeltt the value; (b) duration of the value, measured
in terms ofthe persistence of the value over a period of time; (c) intensity with which
the value is sought or maintained, measured in terms of effort, crucial choices, verbal affirmation, and reactions to threats to the value; and (d) prestige of value
carriers; that is, of persons, objects, or organizations considered to be bearers of the
value (measured in terms of heroes, high status, reputation, etc.). (These criteria can
be also used for evaluating group beliefs.)
In some groups the values, like norms, may be formally formulated (i.e., in writing) and maintained as group beliefs, while in other groups, they are never formally
defined, but may be considered as group beliefs and carried latently through the
social processes of socialization and influence. However, in both types of groups,
when values are shared by group members and viewed by them as characterizing the
group, they are group beliefs. In this case, the value or values define the uniqueness
of the group and differentiate it from out-groups.
52
Although the Ku Klux Klan is vastly different from Amnesty International, its
group beliefs are also based on values. The principal beliefs of the Ku Klux Klan are
presented in the following way:
53
We invite all men who can qualify to become citizens of the Invisible Empire, to
approach the portal of our beneficent domain, join us in our noble work of extending its boundaries, and in disseminating the gospel of Klankraft, thereby encouraging, conserving, protecting and making vital the fraternal relationship in the
practice of an honorable clannishness; to share with us the sacred duty of protecting
womanhood; to maintain forever the God-given supremacy of the White Race; to
commemorate the holy and chivalric achievement of our fathers, to safeguard the
sacred rights, privileges and institutions of our civil government; to bless mankind
and to keep eternally ablaze the sacred fire of a fervent devotion to a pure
Americanism. (Vander Zanden, 1960, p. 290)
Thus, the values of womanhood, white supremacy, mankind, and Americanism are
the values that the group intends to protect.
Group Goals
Group goals are defined as beliefs of valued or desired future specific states for the
group (Cartwright & Zander, 1968; Etzioni, 1975a). On the basis ofthis definition,
we can assume that with few exceptions almost all groups have goals. Some groups,
for example, may focus on mere function of having social relationship or on routine
functions to maintain status quo (Korten, 1962). Despite such exceptions, instrumental and well-defined goals playa significant role in the life of many groups. In
most of these cases, goals may serve as group beliefs in addition to other beliefs.
Individuals form groups to achieve certain goals. Subsequently, goals are often considered as a raison d'etre forigroup formation, frequently keep group members
together, provide a basis for solidarity, and give direction for activity. These functions are particularly explicit in certain voluntary groups that are formed to advance
specific goals (Sills, 1958). Thus, it is not surprising that group goals frequently
serve as basic group beliefs. They increase the identification of the group members
with their group and define the boundary for group membership. In this vein, March
and Simon (1958) noted that:
The greater the extent to which goals are perceived as shared among members of
a group, the stronger the propensity of the individual to identify with the group and
vice versa. (p. 66)
Several examples of group goals may provide illustrations of how they function as
group beliefs. Trans-Species Unlimited (TSU) is a national animal rights group
"dedicated to the total elimination of animal abuse and exploitation:' This group
beliefleads the TSU to direct actions and legislative campaigns to end such practices
as the use of the leghold trap and live bird shoots and commercial exploitation of
rabbits for meat, fur, and research.
The International Kolping Society, founded in the middle of the previous century
in Germany by Adolph Kolping, aims today:
to enable its members, as Christians of the world, to give a good account of themselves in their occupations, marriages, families, the church, society as a whole, and
the state, to serve the needs of its members and society as a whole, to promote
54
On the basis of these group beliefs the society engages in various community activities to help individuals and the group. The Richard III Society was founded in
England in 1924 to:
1. To promote in every possible way historical research into the life and times of
King Richard ill.
2. To secure a reassessment of the historical material relating to this period and of
the role in English history of this monarch.
3. To circulate all relevant historical information to members ofthe Society and to
educational authorities.
(copied from the pamphlet of The Richard ill Society, New Orleans, undated)
The principal goal of this group is to present the truthful history of King Richard III
in view of past distortions and biases.
Groups differ with regard to the goals that they try to achieve. There is a variety
of goals that can be classified into different categories. One type of category has
received special attention by political scientists - namely, goals to influence governmental decisions. Groups that have these goals are called interest groups (Salisbury,
1975), and the term interest denotes a "shared attitude toward what is needed or
wanted in a given situation, observable as demands, or claims upon other groups in
the society" (Truman, 1951, p. 33). These shared demands or claims, which reflect
goals, serve as a basis for group formation and therefore function as group beliefs.
The interests can pertain to various contents involving either tangible or intangible
claims, and concerns of either a particular policy objective or wide societal goals
(Salisbury, 1975).
Interest groups can be based on either a few or many group beliefs. Interest
groups, such as some liberal and conservative groups in the United States, may
adopt far-reaching political beliefs covering a wide spectrum of policy areas. Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) and The Conservative Caucus ('fCC) are examples, respectively, of durable and important liberal and conservative ideological
interest groups. 'fCC lists 10 principles (some are values) that may be considered as
group beliefs:
1. Right to Enjoy the Income From One's Own Labor
There should be a ceiling on the proportion of income which government may take
away, in taxes, from any citizen. Graduated taxation, combined with inflation,
places an especially unfair burden on working Americans, whose tax rates increase
automatically, as inflation pushes them into higher tax brackets.
2. Right to Personal Security
Citizens have the right to the security of their persons, their homes, and their
property. It is the first task of government to protect the law-abiding from those who
break the law. Concern for the rights of crime's victims must be emphasized over
the privileges ofthose who commit crimes. The goal oflaw enforcement should be
to apprehend, -punish, and isolate those who criminally violate the rights of others.
55
On the basis of its principles, TCC is involved in pressuring and lobbying the
Congress and administrations to support or oppose various specific issues. For
example, TCC supports the 10% flat tax, the Strategic Defense Initiative, and aid
to anticommunist freedom fighters. TCC has also opposed the Panama Canal
treaties, SALT II, government funding of left-wing organizations, and U.S. aid to
communist nations.
56
In some groups, the group beliefs refer to one broad topic that is relevant to
several issues. For example, the Consumer Federation of America reflects a viewpoint that favors the protection of the rights of individual consumers through the
regulation of corporate activities, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce reflects a
strong belief in the character of the American free enterprise system, opposing
excessive government regulation of business. Other groups' interests are formed on
the basis of narrow group beliefs reflecting single issues. For example, the National
Rifle Association has a strong belief in the American citizen's unrestricted right to
bear arms; the National Right to Life Committee believes in the sanctity of the fetus.
Shipley (1976) classified over 300 interest groups in Great Britain into 12 subject
categories, such as political, trade union, consumer, social, religious and ethical, or
environmental groups. Each group has a defined goal that may be considered as a
group belief. Thus, for example, the goal of the British Measure Group is to conserve imperial measures; the goal of the Anti-Apartheid Movement is to end all British collaboration with the regime of South Africa; and the goal of the Royal Society
for the Protection of Birds is to ensure the better protection of birds by developing
public interest in them and in their place in nature.
Group Ideology
One of the most discussed concepts for describing a group's uniqueness is ideology.
Ideology is often referred to as the mental characteristic of a group. Indeed, various
definitions of ideology refer to its commonality-a state indicating that ideological
beliefs are shared by group members. It reflects their common experience and
serves as a basis for group members' cooperation, morale, order, and rationale for
their behavior. Ideology refers to an integrated set of beliefs constituting a program,
a theory of causes and effects, and premises on the nature of man and societal order
(Apter, 1964; Lane, 1962; Shils, 1968). For example, Toch (1965) defined ideology
as:
a set of related beliefs held by a group of persons. The ideology of a social movement is a statement of what the members of the movement are trying to achieve
together, and what they wish to affirm jointly ... the ideology of a social movement defines the movement, and contrasts it with other movements and institutions. (p. 21)
57
state. The individuals and groups are secondary to the state, which embodies the
culture and spirit of the people and is considered to be the highest and noblest value.
The state provides an orientation for the individuals-it is only there that they can
fulfill their identity. According to the fascist ideology, life is a continuing struggle
for national supremacy. In order to achieve the nation's goals, the state has to exercise complete authority over all areas of public and private life, from the education
of children to control of the economy. The state has the right to control and restructure the society. Accordingly, the state requires total loyalty. There is no place for
groups or individuals to object, since the state is the source of political, economic,
and moral action (Mussolini, 1935). These principles served as group beliefs of the
Italian Fascist Party, and, with its ascendence to power in 1922, the party tried to
turn them into group beliefs for the entire nation.
For seven decades, the principles of the communist ideology have served as group
beliefs especially for the members of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, but
probably also as a unique characteristic for the population of the country. This ideology is the official creed and the most accessible characteristic in every domain of
life in Russia. The basic principles of communism are inculcated in the Soviet
citizens from the early years of education and maintained through all the state communication channels. The ideology advocates a classless social system of equality
for all members of society, which provides everyone with material and cultural
benefits according to their growing needs (Triska, 1962).
In sum, this limited review of the contents did not exhaust all possible categories
of group beliefs. As indicated, group beliefs can have any contents, and the above
categories serve only as relevant examples of the ones that are frequently used by
social scientists. Group members share group beliefs that characterize them and
differentiate them from other groups. As illustrations of possible contents, this
review was not based on group members' reports to identify their group beliefs,
though it is possible that they actually serve as group beliefs. Future research should
treat the formal statements as hypotheses that need to be validated through empirical evidence.
58
group and thus the reality of the individuals who view themselves as group members. In fact, in most cases, individuals voluntarily join groups, such as religious
denominations, political organizations, or professional associations, on the basis of
group beliefs. The act of joining a group indicates that group members accept, at
least formally, group beliefs and hold them as valid.
A reduced confidence in group beliefs may shatter group members' reality, especially in cases when group membership is very important for individuals or when
the change is sudden. The questioning of group beliefs, especially central ones, may
have significant implications for group life. Moving group beliefs from the status of
verities to the status of hypotheses may change the essence ofthe group or its raison
d'etre, or even cause its division or disintegration. It is, therefore, not surprising that
groups often use various mechanisms to maintain high confidence in group beliefs.
It is recognized, though, that groups differ with regard to their insistence on confidence. While orthodox groups insist on high confidence in group beliefs (Deconchy,
1984), other groups may be less strict on this matter. The former groups do not
allow any doubts or sanction their expression. The other groups are more tolerant
of changes and therefore their group beliefs may be gradually altered.
Centrality
The centrality of group beliefs implies that they are often accessible in group members' repertoire and that they are relevant for consideration in making various evaluations, judgments, or decisions, including behaviors (Bar-Tal, D., 1986). The
centrality characteristic of group beliefs has at least two different aspects. First, the
characteristic may refer to the importance of the set of beliefs for the group members, and second, it may refer to the importance of the specific belief within the set
of group beliefs.
The former aspect is based on an assumption that some groups are more important
for their members than others. Individuals are usually members in a number of
groups and not all of them are of equal importance to them. The importance of the
group for group members is reflected in the centrality of group beliefs. That is, when
the group is important for group members, in most cases the group beliefs are central. For example, it can be assumed that group beliefs are very central in groups
such as the Amish (Hostetler, 1968) and Lubovitcher Hassidim (Levy, 1975). Group
membership in these groups is the most important characteristic for the members,
and the group beliefs are frequently accessible and often taken into consideration.
In other groups, group beliefs may be unimportant for most of the group members.
The other aspect of characterizing group beliefs as central refers to the assumption
that not all beliefs are of equal centrality. Some group beliefs may be of greater
importance than others and thus may be more central. It means that when a group
has a set of elaborated group beliefs, some of them contribute more to the group
characterization and its definition than others. The more central group beliefs are considered as prototypic in group characterization and therefore are called basic group
beliefs. Their weight in defining the essence of the group is crucial. Beyond the simple
self-definition "We are a group;' these beliefs provide the group's credo. For instance,
59
in certain groups, group beliefs that refer to group goals or identity may be more central than group beliefs that refer to values or group history. In a specific example, it
may be assumed that while the Mormons have numerous group beliefs, one of the
basic ones is the conviction that the Book of Mormon is another Testament of Jesus
Christ, a religious and secular record of ancient American civilization (O'Dea, 1957).
The centrality characteristic is not a given, but often is maintained by external factors. Availability and saliency of group beliefs in the group members' environment
may influence their centrality. The first element refers to the frequency with which
the content of group beliefs is exposed to group members. The other element
expresses the prominence and vividness of the group belief when it is presented to
group members. When group beliefs are repeatedly presented to group members in
a prominent and vivid manner, they are often accessible in group members' repertoires (Higgins & King, 1981). Groups often keep group beliefs accessible by constantly repeating the contents of group beliefs. Moreover, they develop cultural and
educational mechanisms to maintain group beliefs as central.
Functionality
Group beliefs are functional for an individual and a group. There are numerous
functions that they can fulfill, but the two most important ones, which are implied
by the definition, are identification and information.
Identification function. Group beliefs serve the function of identification. That is,
group beliefs provide the basis for group membership. Individuals regard group
beliefs as characterizing them as group members and as defining the boundary of the
group. Group beliefs unite group members by defining the identity of the group and
serving as one of the bases that allows a categorization of individuals as group members (Wilder, 1986). On this basis, individuals perceive themselves and are perceived by others as a group. Thus, on the one hand, group beliefs that serve the
function of identification unify group members, and, on the other hand, these
beliefs differentiate them from out-groups. The unification is reflected in the recognition of similarity (see, for example, Bar-Tal, D., 1989b). Group members are
aware that they share the same beliefs that define their "groupness" and thus become
aware of the similarity. Moreover, the contents of group beliefs also point out the
similarities among them. Common history, common characteristics, and common
needs are only a few examples of such contents. In turn, the perception of similarity
may be an important source of attraction for individuals to become group members
(Cartwright, 1968). Group members who differ with regard to many characteristics
hold/the same group beliefs, which provides a common basis. In this respect, group
beliefs enhance integration and feelings of solidarity and minimize differences by
focusing on commonalities and allegiance.
Also, since in many cases, groups try to be differentiated, group beliefs often provide a criterion for differentiation. Group beliefs draw the line between the in-group
and out-groups. They indicate that those who do not hold the group beliefs are
different. As Sherif (1951) pointed out,
60
In this context, we can understand Tajfel's statement: "We are what we are because
they are not what we are" (Tajfel, 1979, p. 183).
Tajfel himself made a major contribution to understanding the differentiation
process. He showed that even in the experiments using random, accidental, and
superficial criteria for group formation, subjects tried actively to differentiate
between their own and the other group (Tajfel, 1978). Thus, for example, studies by
Tajfel, Flament, Billig, and Bundy (1971), Billig and Tajfel (1973), and Allen and
Wilder (1975) showed that mere categorization of persons into groups, even on the
basis of an arbitrary task such as preferences for paintings, is sufficient for formation of the group belief "We are a group" and causes discrimination in favor of ingroup members at the expense of the out-group. The experiment by Allen and
Wilder demonstrated that group formation (including the formation of a group
belief) is a more potent factor in discrimination against out-group than the awareness that the out-group members have some similar beliefs. Also, belief similarity
about the basis for group classification (Le., formation of a group belief) had a significant effect on discriminative behavior. Special in-group favoritism was displayed
when the in-group had similar beliefs. It thus is not surprising that the review of
intergroup relations by Brewer (1979) indicates that the need to differentiate
between in-group and out-group is a well-established phenomenon. The present
framework suggests that group beliefs foster the differentiation process.
Informative function. Group beliefs also have an informative function. First of all,
group beliefs allow the organization of the social world with the categories about the
group. They enable group members to know what makes them unique and different
from the out-groups. Moreover, group beliefs may provide the structure with which
group members can organize their knowledge about their own group. They provide
the raison d'etre for the group and specify knowledge about various contents, such
as group history and group goals. Thus, group beliefs allow an understanding ofthe
group's past and of its present bonds, and possibly predict the group's future course
of action.
In cases when group beliefs are central and refer to the totality of life, they serve
as a single criterion for structuring stored knowledge and incoming information. In
this situation, group beliefs shape group members' reality and serve as a frame of
reference for organizing any knowledge. Thrner and Killian (1957) noted that, in
thi~ case, a group completely takes over the individual. An individual's perspective
stems directly from group beliefs. Group beliefs provide the entire outlook for the
world. The group commands the total allegiance of its members, and group beliefs
serve as lenses through which the world is interpreted.
In addition, specific contents may serve other functions as well. For example, as
will be presented later, group beliefs of prejudice and delegitimation, which lead to
discrimination of another group, may fulfill a function of establishing one group's
Summary
61
superiority over another group (see Bar-Tal, D., 1989c). Conversely, group beliefs
indicating that the rest of the world has negative behavioral intentions toward that
group may prepare group members for the worst and enable group members to take
a course of action without considering the reaction of other groups (Bar-Tal, D.,
1986). Other beliefs may serve such needs as security or self-respect (Bar-Tal, D.,
1989a; Toch, 1965).
In a specific example, Simpson (1955) pointed out that the group belief ofthe Ras
Tafari movement played several important functions in the life of the blacks in
Jamaica. They provided
compensation for the humiliation and deprivation of a lowly social station; emotional warmth and friendship of the leader and like-minded believers; hope for a
better life in the other-world; recreation; opportunities for self-expression through
singing, speech-making, processing-leading, and costume-wearing, recognition
through office-holding, or as a speaker, musician, organizer or fund-raiser; and
economic assistance at such critical times as serious illness, death in the family, and
court trials. (p. 170)
Also, in the case of the Ku Klux Klan, Vander Zanden (1960) noted that the Klan's
group beliefs offer the members a chance to acquire importance, hope, a sense of
worthiness, meaningfulness, and purposiveness.
The above-described characteristics of group beliefs are not stable. They may
change from time to time or from situation to situation. First of all, the available
repertoire of group beliefs of any group is not stable. Groups add and omit group
beliefs throughout their history. Second, the level of confidence, centrality, and
functionality of specific group beliefs may change. Thus, group beliefs which are
considered as facts may turn into doubts, while previously considered hypotheses
may change into verities of group beliefs. Also, central group beliefs may turn into
peripheral beliefs, and vice versa. Finally, the functions that specific group beliefs
serve may also alter. The issues of change in group beliefs will be discussed further
in Chapter 6.
Summary
Group beliefs can be of any content, since the numerous human groups differ in their
experiences, composition, goals, structure, and environment in which they act.
Indeed, the provided examples of group beliefs illustrate the variety of possible contents. Social scientists have used concepts to describe groups, but none of them corresponds to the proposed concept of group beliefs. Groups have beliefs pertaining to
norms, values, goals, or ideology, but not all of them are necessarily group beliefs.
Some beliefs of norms, values, goals, and ideology may characterize groups, may be
shared by group members who are aware of this, and may therefore be group beliefs.
Group beliefs can be characterized not only by content, but also by psychological
properties, which may change with time. First, they can be characterized by the
confidence that group members attribute to them. Although most of them are
treated as verities and groups use mechanisms to maintain their validity among
62
Chapter 5
In the previous chapters, it has been established that an existence of a group indicates that group members share at least one fundamental group belief-"We are a
group" -and almost always add additional group beliefs. Sharing these beliefs serves
as an important characteristic of group membership. Thus, the next necessary step
in the present conception is to examine the conditions and processes regarding the
formation and maintenance of group beliefs.
64
the out-groups. The shared beliefs are products of common perceptions of a group's
past and interaction between forces operating within a group and those coming from
out-groups. Tajfel (1981) hypothesized that minority groups tend to emerge as a
result of common attitudes or treatment by the outside groups that, on the one hand,
facilitates the perception of a common fate, and, on the other hand, indicates the
boundaries operating between the in-group and the out-groups. Several other conceptions stress individuals' shared needs (e.g., Killian, 1964; Toch, 1965), such as
common feelings offrustration, alienation, deprivation, exploitation, and injustice,
any of which may serve as a basis for group formation.
An experiment by social psychologists Zander, Stotland, and Wolfe (1960) may be
seen as a demonstration of how the basic group belief is formed. In this experiment,
the investigators created a group composed of female college students. To foster a
group entity, the experimenter created conditions that provided several antecedent
beliefs regarding similarity, proximity, common goals, and identity. Specifically, the
experimenter systematically manipulated the perception of "groupness" by varying
seating arrangements (creating proximity), by pointing to similarities among group
members (creating commonality), and by assigning a goal for the group (creating
competition against another group). Group members were then asked to choose a
name for their group. These antecedent beliefs, together with the name of the group,
produced the basic group belief "We are a group." The study also showed that these
individuals behaved as group members. Thus, the investigators concluded that when
a group is formed, large proportions of the self "become involved in the group and
are affected by identification with the group" (p. 475).
In this vein, it is relevant to note the observation by Sherif (1936) who suggested that
when we are in a situation with other people, our experience and subsequent
behavior are modified by the special social conditions around us. The social situation may develop into some form of closed system, with more or less rigid boundaries in which the experience and actions of the individual are regulated by his
membership character and his special position in the group .... The slogans and
values that develop or become standardized in the group situation become his
guides to action. (pp. 84-85)
65
On the basis ofthe present analysis, it becomes obvious that social categorization
is the psychological process that underlies group formation in the minds of the
individuals who are group members. Tajfel's theory of social identity (1978, 1981)
elaborates on this process. Social identity, which denotes a person's membership in
social groups, is defined as a "part of the individual's self concept which derives
from their knowledge of their membership in a social group (or groups) together
with the value and emotional significance attached to that membership" (Tajfel,
1981, p. 255). The theory explaining the development of social identity suggests
that social categorization provides an important basis for the group member's selfidentification because group members derive aspects of their self-concepts from the
66
social groups to which they belong. That is, once group beliefs are formed and the
group is established, group members are motivated to achieve and maintain positive
self-esteem. Since their evaluations depend in part on their evaluations of the group
to which they belong, they are motivated to perceive their own group in positive
terms. This is done by differentiating their own group from other groups on the
basis of group beliefs and by perceiving their own group as superior.
More recently, Turner (1987), on the basis of social identity theory, further elaborated on the process of group formation within the framework of self-categorization
theory. According to Turner, in order for a group to become a reality, a collective of
individuals must group themselves cognitively as the same, in contrast to some
other classes of collectives. Thus, this theory suggests that the necessary and sufficient condition for psychological group formation is social categorization. Turner
hypothesizes
that any collection of individuals in a given group setting is more likely to categorize themselves as a group (become a psychological group) to the degree that the
subjectively perceived differences between them are less than the differences perceived between them and other people (psychologically) present in the setting (i.e.,
as the ratio of intergroup to intragroup differences increases). (These comparisons
will be made on relevant dimensions selected from the common features of the selfcategory that includes all that are being compared). (p. 52)
67
Furthermore, this group belief ("We are a group") affected group members' memory-they remembered better the information that emphasized in-group similarities
than out-group dissimilarities. Finally, group members favored the in-group over
out-groups on trait ratings and reward distributions.
In another study by Turner, Sachdev, and Hogg (1983), school adolescents were
classified into two separate groups either on the basis of random assignment or on
the basis of ostensibly predetermined mutual liking or disliking. The dependent variable was distribution of points that reflected in-group favoritism. The result showed
that even individuals who were categorized as a group on the basis of consensual dislike exhibited group behavior similarly to individuals categorized as a group on the
basis of mutual liking. Thus, according to Turner et aI., the mere categorization of
individuals belonging to the same group, even when they dislike each other, leads
to group formation.
In this vein, Horwitz and Rabbie (1989) suggested that external labeling is only
one possible factor affecting social categorization. Moreover, on the basis of Lewin's
(1948) and Sherifs (1966) conceptions, Horwitz and Rabbie suggest that social
categorization is only a phase in group formation (i.e., a formation of a social
category). The necessary condition for group formation is a development of interdependence. That is, a group is formed when group members become aware of their
positive interdependence to one another at least in some of their goals, interests, and
outcomes. This can take place when individuals expect or actually experience positive or negative consequences solely as a functional unit, a social group. According
to the present framework, the group belief "We are a group" is only the first of many
possible beliefs. Clearly, groups form many, often even complex group beliefs, as
interdependence is formed and interaction takes place.
Still, the important contribution of minimal in-group situations to the understanding of group formation is the demonstration that the perception of the group as an
entity does not have to be based on actual experiences, but a mere piece of information may be a sufficient condition for self-labeling as a group. Individuals may be
told that they are given the same label (or category), and this information may cause
them to form the belief "We are a group" (e.g., Billig & Tajfel, 1973). In real life situations, information or beliefs formulated by an individual (or a collective) may
influence many individuals to form a new shared reality. This shared reality may
serve as a basis for group formation.
Numerous political parties, religious groups, and volunteer organizations are
based on group beliefs that were formulated before the group was formed. In this
process, the beliefs are first formulated, and then an attempt is made (sometimes it
is even unintentional) to form a group in which these beliefs serve as group beliefs.
The following examples illustrate this process:
The Jehovah's Witness group was founded in 1872 by Charles Taze Russell in a
suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Russell, who was brought up as a Presbyterian,
was exposed to ideas of Adventism and Second Adventism until he formulated his
own beliefs. These beliefs, which were later developed and modified by his successor, Joseph Franklin Rutherford, originally served as a basis for the formation of a
new denomination (Stroup, 1945).
68
Amnesty International was initiated by Peter Benenson, who, after reading about
two Portuguese students who were arrested because of toasting freedom,
approached Eric Baker, a prominent Quaker, and Louis Bloom-Cooper, the internationally known lawyer, to begin a campaign to appeal for amnesty in 1961. They
formulated a statement proposing
to work impartially for the release of those imprisoned for their opinion, to seek for
them a fair trial, to enlarge the right of asylum, to help political refugees find work,
and to urge the creation of effective international machinery to guarantee freedom
of opinion.
The group publicized the fate of eight political prisoners as its first act, and the
response was overwhelming. The organization was set on the basis of the formulated
principles. Sympathizers living nearby were put in contact and asked to "adopt"
individual political prisoners. British artist Diana Redhouse designed an emblem
for the organization based on a candle encircled by barbed wire, and the name
Amnesty International was adopted (Power, 1981).
Cannon (1973) described how the Black Panthers formulated their group beliefs:
One afternoon in October, 1966, Huey told Bobby Seale, "We need a program. We
have to have a program for the people. A program that people can understand. A
program that they can read and see, and which expresses their desires and needs at
the same time." That night they sat down in the North Oakland Poverty Center,
where they were working, and wrote out the to-point program which is still the
basis for all Panthers' actions. (p. 339)
The program concerned freedom for the black community, full employment, the
end of exploitation, decent housing, true education, the exemption of blacks from
military service, the end of police brutality, freedom to black prisoners, establishment of black courts, and self-determination (Cannon, 1973).
Toch (1965) presented the description of how the Anti-Digit Dialing League
(ADDL) was started:
The Anti-Digit Dialing League started over a cup of coffee in San Francisco when
the conversation, quite by accident, drifted to the new Digit Dialing system. Both
coffee drinkers had found the new system extremely confusing and difficult to use.
They also wondered whether the change was really necessary. As a consequence
they inserted a tiny notice in the classified section of a newspaper inquiring whether
other people had experienced the same thoughts. They signed the ad, Anti-Digit
Dialing League.
The response was incredible. Over thirty-five hundred people responded within
ten days in the San Francisco Bay area alone. As word about ADDL spread throughout the country, people wrote in wanting to start chapters of ADDL in other cities
across the country. It quickly became obvious that ADDL was expressing a deep but
previously unorganized concern of telephone users that the telephone company had
somehow forgotten about them. This is the reason that ADDL started; it was an
expression of widespread concern. (Toch, 1965, pp. 16-17, copied from Phones are
for People, Anti-Digit Dialing League, 1962)
It should be noted that in all of these cases, a priori formulated beliefs have to
appeal to individuals' needs in order to become a basis for group formation. It can
69
be assumed that only then will individuals react to the formulated beliefs and join an
emerging group.
70
As Sherif et al. (1961) pointed out, these beliefs were produced from scratch.
They were formed as a consequence of the interaction processes found in intragroup
relations. They served as unique characteristics of the group and defined the substance of the "groupness." The particular group name, the flag, the norm, or the
territory, in addition to the belief "We are a group;' defined the essence of the group.
For group members, these group beliefs served as a cognitive basis for their feeling
of "groupness." The belief that they were a group, as well as other group beliefs,
became part of their reality. It can be said that although the mere division into
groups created the fundamental group belief, the addition of group beliefs not only
strengthened the group identity, but also provided meaning to the "we-ness" reality.
A classic study by Festinger, Riecken, and Schachter (1956) on individuals'
behavior in social movements that results in unfulfilled prophecies provides another
example of group beliefs. In the specific case described, a housewife named Marian
Keech claimed that she received a message from a superior being on another planet,
stating that a flood would destroy part of the continent, including the town in which
she lived. Mainly on the basis of a belief in this message, but also on the basis of the
belief that she had received a communication from creatures from outer space, various individuals joined her and her main follower, Dr. Thomas Armstrong, in
another town. The individuals around Mrs. Keech and Dr. Armstrong perceived
themselves as a group. Their beliefs about the coming disaster and outer space communications defined their uniqueness and provided the psychological basis for
group formation. They defined the essence of the group and, therefore, were group
beliefs. These beliefs differentiated the members of this group from other
individuals in the community who did not join the group.
In the present conception, an important question should be asked: Which common
beliefs (i.e., shared beliefs by group membel's) become group beliefs? In principle,
many beliefs can become group beliefs in the group members' repertoire. In reality,
however, relatively few beliefs achieve this status. Three conditions are suggested
as an explanation of which shared beliefs become group beliefs. One condition
refers to the functionality of group beliefs. Beliefs that are functional for group formation and maintenance become group beliefs, since it is assumed that the need to
belong and the need to form social identity are important needs that underlie human
beings' cognitions and behaviors. In this context, of special importance are beliefs
that differentiate the in-group and out-groups, since they allow demarcation of the
group boundary and provide significant information about the group.
The differentiating beliefs indicate the similarity of group members, which overrides the differences between them. That is, through the psychological process of
categorization, group beliefs simultaneously make the group members uniquely
similar, yet distinctively different from members of other groups. They provide the
individuals with a system of orientation toward their own group and other groups.
This system leads to the perception and judgment of individuals of the same category
as more similar to one another than they really are and enhances the perceptual and
judgmental contrast between individuals not belonging to this category (Tajfel,
1978, 1981). An experiment by Allen and Wilder (1979) demonstrated this phe-
71
notnenon. They created two groups, ostensibly on the basis of artistic preferences
(which served as group beliefs), and then had group members complete an opinion
survey in the manner they thought another member of their own (or the other) group
would respond to the items. They found that individuals assumed that another member of their group would express beliefs more similar to their own (previously
assessed) opinions than would an out-group member. This difference occurred even
for belief items irrelevant to art.
In addition, those beliefs that provide information about the group become group
beliefs. It is not an accident that group beliefs consist of contents that contain such
elements as group history, group goals, and common characteristics of the group.
These contents provide information for group members about themselves and their
commonalities. They provide the raison d'etre for group formation and, later, for
group maintenance. Also, a fulfillment of additional functions by a belief may especially strengthen its status as a group belief. Thus, for example, beliefs that help to
achieve group goals, raise the self-esteem of the group members, or strengthen the
feelings of security are likely to become group beliefs.
Another condition pertains to the saliency of the beliefs that become group beliefs.
Beliefs'saliency refers to those beliefs that draw special attention of group members
because ofprominence and distinctiveness. In combination with the first condition,
these beliefs are efficiently and swiftly absorbed, and demarcate the boundary
between the in-group and the out-groups. In some groups the salient group beliefs
may pertain to the most perceivable cues, such as physical appearance. Special
clothing, ornamentation, or even skin color may serve as a salient basis for defining
one's own group. In other groups, salient beliefs may refer to individuals' needs
(Toch, 1965), group goals, or common experiences.
Finally, in order for beliefs to become group beliefs, epistemic authorities of group
members have to consider them as such and support them. Epistemic authorities are
those knowledge sources who exert determinative influence on the formation of
knowledge (Kruglanski, 1989). Group members attribute high confidence to beliefs
coming from epistemic authority, consider these beliefs as truth, and adopt them as
part of their own repertoires. In our case the concept applies mostly to leaders who
perpetuate beliefs that become group beliefs. Political, intellectual, religious,
social, and cultural leaders determine to a considerable extent which beliefs become
group beliefs and influence group members to accept them as such. They frequently
select the group's goals which may serve as group beliefs, formulate ideologies or
religious doctrines, decide what events in the past should be remembered as group
beliefs for the future, often select the symbols for the group, and decide on the attributes that characterize group members (e.g, Bar-Tal, Y., 1989a).
It is usually in the formative phase of group development that group beliefs are
established. This is a period of malleability during which group beliefs are formulated and reformulated. With time, group beliefs emerge in a relatively stable formulation, although always with a possibility of change. In any event, as long as the
group exists, it will always be faced with the task of disseminating group beliefs and
maintaining them.
72
73
butes, skills, motivations, and knowledge, differ with regard to the degree of centrality that they ascribe to group beliefs. For some group members, group beliefs may
be very central, while for other group members they may be peripheral. Also, group
members differ with regard to attributing centrality to specific group beliefs. For
some group members, certain group beliefs may be more important than others.
However, a necessary condition for beliefs to become group beliefs is an agreement
among group members regarding the characterization of their "groupness." A serious disagreement among the group members regarding the nature of group beliefs
may result in a group schism. This phenomenon will be discussed later.
Second, once the group beliefs are acquired, their accessibility may change from
time to time. That is, although a group may have in its repertoire a long list of group
beliefs, not all of them have to be accessible at the same time. Different group beliefs
may appear in group members' minds in different situations, since different situations may invoke different beliefs. However, some group beliefs may be very central
for the essence of the group, and, therefore, they may be more or less constantly
accessible in each group member's repertoire.
A considerable portion of social science research has been devoted to the study of
group pressures for uniformity (e.g., Cartwright & Zander, 1968; Festinger,
Schachter, & Back, 1950; Levine, in press; Shaw, 1976; Verba, 1961). This literature can be used to explain the psychological processes whereby groups maintain
their group beliefs.
Groups differ with regard to the control mechanisms that they use to maintain
group beliefs among group members. In some groups, there are no control mechanisms. The guiding assumption in these groups is that those who join them and maintain their membership share group beliefs. However, the great majority of these
groups develop various channels of communication, which not only keep the groups
74
alive, but also preserve group beliefs. Thus, for example, in these groups, regular
meetings, newsletters, or mass media information may remind members about the
group beliefs and thus maintain them.
Other groups require adherence to group beliefs and some may even use various
types of sanctions as means of control. These groups differ with regard to sanctions,
which are applied to group members who do not adhere to group beliefs. Among
groups that use sanctions, some sanctions might be minor and of a mainly social
nature, while others might be more formal and used against group members who
openly express their reservation or rejection of the group beliefs.
In the former groups, group members may express explicitly, or even implicitly,
their disapproval and dissatisfaction with individuals who do not adhere to group
beliefs. In the latter groups, the sanctions may consist of a reprimand or even expulsion. For example, the rules of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union passed by
the 22nd Congress specifically refer to such sanctions. Rule 9, dealing with duties
and rights of party members, reads:
9. A party member who fails to fulfill his duties as laid down in the Rules, or commits other offenses, shall be called to account, and may be subjected to the penalty
of admonition, reprimand (or severe reprimand), with entry in the registration
card. The highest Party penalty is expulsion from the Party.
Should the necessity arise, a Party organization may, as a Party penalty, reduce
a Party member to the status of candidate member for a period of up to one year.
The decision of the primary Party organization reducing a Party member to candidate membership is subject to endorsement by the district or city Party committee.
On the expiration of his period of reduction to candidate membership his readmission to full membership of the Party will follow the regular procedure, with retention of his former Party standing.
In the case of insignificant offenses, measures of Party education and influence
should be applied-in the form of comradely criticism, Party censure, warning, or
reproof. (Triska, 1962, pp. 163-164)
Indeed, Rigby (1968) reported that expUlsion was a widely used practice. For
example, in 1961, Khrushchev stated that over 200,000 persons had been expelled
for various reasons since 1955, but this number was only 40% of the expUlsions carried out between 1951 and 1955.
The extent and intensity to which group members adhere voluntarily to group beliefs
may be seen as an indication of group cohesiveness. Whereas centrality of group
beliefs in group members' repertoire may indicate a high level of cohesiveness, relative disregard of group beliefs may indicate a low level of cohesiveness. That is, when
there is a consensus about group beliefs and when group members frequently think
about them, view them as unquestionable facts, and consider them as relevant to the
decision-making process, then it can be said that the group is highly cohesive. In contrast, when there is a low consensus about group beliefs, and/or they are not considered to be important, then it can be said that the group is not cohesive. This view, in
contrast to general definitions, specifies that the nature of the group members' commitment reflects the cohesiveness of the group. For example, Cartwright (1968)
defined cohesiveness as the total sum of forces attracting members to a group, while
Festinger (1950) suggested that cohesiveness reflects the pressure to stay in a group.
75
High centrality of group beliefs indicates that they are important for group members and that they satisfy their needs. When group beliefs are central, group members
stay in a group and are attracted to it. It can be assumed that in this situation group
members' identification with the group is high. Moreover, the belief that group beliefs
are shared by the group members strengthens the feeling of "we-ness:' Thus, according to the present view, group beliefs in cohesive groups express a kind of cement that
binds group members together, maintains their relationship to one another, and
makes them act in a coordinated manner. Parsons (1951) referred to this process as
belief institutionalization. It takes place when "subscription to a system of beliefs
becomes a criterion of loyalty to a collectivity, as such as a religious group" (p. 56).
76
In the same vein, Galanter (1980) described the recruitment process of new members to the Unification Church (the members of which are called "Moonies"). In this
process, considerable effort is directed at presenting and imparting group beliefs. In
a series of lectures, the potential members are exposed to the group beliefs and later
evaluated, among other things, on the extent to which they accept these beliefs. Only
on the basis of the evaluation are individuals later accepted as group members.
In many cases, groups actively try to recruit members. They search for individuals
who may accept the group beliefs and become group members. Groups such as religious denominations, sects, political parties, or various other voluntary organizations
make efforts to convince individuals of the validity, importance, and utility of their
group beliefs. Moreover, some of the groups have special institutions and even
specialists who function to attract new members for the group.
Nevertheless, not all the groups are open and accept new members on the basis of
their acceptance of group beliefs. Some groups have group beliefs that limit group
membership to specific categories of individuals. These restrictive beliefs can pertain
to characteristics such as sex, race, ethnic origin, religion, geographical residence, or
even particular experience. For example, the Order of the Sons of Italy in America is
limited to members who are of Italian descent and live in the United States: the
Summary
77
National Black Sisters' Conference restricts its membership to black Catholic women;
and the Society of Vietnamese Rangers is limited to ranger, paratroopers, and commandos who were advisors to fighting parties in South East Asia.
Finally, it should be noted that being a member of a group and sharing its group
beliefs do not preclude the possibility of joining another group and at the same time
sharing another set of group beliefs. Individuals can be members of several groups at
the same time and hold several sets of group beliefs. For example, they may be members of a work group, a volunteer organization, a professional organization, a religious
group, an ethnic group, and a nation. Each group has a set of group beliefs that
characterizes it. In most cases, individuals are members of groups whose group beliefs
do not contradict each other.
Also, membership in several groups does not imply that multiple group beliefs held
by the individuals are simultaneously accessible at any given moment. We may expect
that accessibility of particular group beliefs at any given moment depends on the
salience of the cues of that group and the individual's attention to these cues (see
Charters & Newcomb, 1952; Kelley,1955). Thus, contingent on a specific situation
and thoughts, certain group beliefs may be accessible at certain times. Such functioning facilitates multiple group membership.
Summary
On the basis of the proposed definition of a group it is suggested that group members
have to share a fundamental group belief, "We are a group;' to which are added other
group beliefs. The formation of the fundamental group belief is based on the social,
perceptual, and cognitive processes in which individuals find out about the commonality among them and categorize themselves as being group members. The fundamental belief is based on at least one preceding belief that provides the antecedent for
this group belief. Subsequently, the antecedent beliefs may become additional group
beliefs.
Group beliefs fulfill various needs of group members, and on their basis individuals
may decide whether to join a group. They especially allow the demarcation between
the group and out-groups, and construct an orientation about the group through the
provided knowledge. It is therefore not surprising that group beliefs are usually salient
by being prominent and distinctive. Also, group epistemic authorities support them
and try to maintain them.
Group members develop various ways of disseminating group beliefs in order to
consolidate group existence. They also use different mechanisms to maintain them.
Some groups even resort to formal control means with sanctions in order to preserve
the group. Nevertheless, group beliefs are not stable and are related to changes
through which groups go. These changes are subjects of Chapter 6.
Chapter 6
Groups are not static entities; rather, they have dynamic natures. They constantly
go through various changes regarding different aspects of their structure (e.g., cohesiveness, norms, leadership, membership composition), tasks (e.g., goals, means),
or processes (e.g., communication, conformity, pressures). The inevitable changes
are due to continuously shifting, external conditions to which the group must adapt,
and to ongoing internal processes that involve the active nature of human beingsthe groups members.
There are many ways to analyze groups' changes, and social scientists have dealt
with this issue since the study of groups began (e.g., Golembiewski, 1962;
Moscovici, 1976; Shaw, 1976; Verba, 1961). However, one way to approach the
inquiry into group change is to focus on group beliefs. The present perspective suggests an examination of how changes in groups reflect the process of alteration
within the system of group beliefs. This examination may illuminate, from a particular angle, why certain changes take place in groups' lives. This chapter will discuss
such phenomena as group mergence, subgroupings, changes of group beliefs, splits
(schisms), and group disintegration.
Mergence of Groups
The mergence of groups is a known phenomenon in group dynamics. Two groups,
or sometimes even more, may merge to form one united group. Mergence can take
place, for example, between two political parties, as happened in 1988 between the
Social Democratic and Liberal Parties in Great Britain; between two interest
groups, as in the 1987 case of the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy and the
Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign in the United States; or between religious
organizations, as in the case where three Lutheran groups decided to merge into one
group in 1986, becoming the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. While it is
recognized that the motivations to merge may be varied, it is possible to assume that
the basis for mergence is almost always the result of a similarity between the group
80
beliefs of the merging groups. It is the similarity of group beliefs that allows the
merging groups to formulate a new set of group beliefs and redefine, without much
difference, a new identity for the group members. Therefore, it is probably rare that
groups with contradictory or different group beliefs will merge.
Thus, one way to analyze mergence is to examine the group beliefs of the merging
groups before the mergence and to follow up on the formation of their new set. This
examination sheds light not only on the process of mergence (for example, which of
the groups had more influence on the formulation of new group beliefs), but also on
the nature of the newly emerged group. In this analysis, the first phase of merging
requires the recognition by the merging groups that their group beliefs are similar.
This recognition usually takes place as a result of contact through action in the same
environment or through communication if the groups are based in different locales.
The groups may be similar in their group beliefs pertaining to goals, values, ideology, or in other contents.
In many cases, the recognition of the similarity of the groups' beliefs leads to
cooperation and coordination of activities. This is often the stage in which the two
groups can examine the feasibility of mergence and evaluate its possible success.
The idea of mergence usually appears in this phase. Subsequently, the process of
merging may begin, assuming that the groups do not differ with regard to central
group beliefs, which may preclude a mergence.
The necessary phase for mergence is the negotiation of an agreeable set of group
beliefs. While the negotiation concerns many aspects of mergence, the determination of new group beliefs may be, in many cases, its essential part. Each group
usually tries to transfer as many of its own group beliefs as possible to the newly formulated set. One of the final outcomes of mergence is the formation of group beliefs
for the new group. These group beliefs serve as a uniting bond for members of the
new group. They provide the new identity for the merged group and a new definition for the "groupness."
The mergence between the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) and the
Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign (FREEZE) is an example of the above process.
SANE was established in 1957 following an advertisement that appeared in the New
York Times (November 15, 1957) calling for an end to nuclear testing. With time,
the group added other group beliefs that served as guides for its activities. For example, the United States' policy in Latin America became an important preoccupation
of SANE in the 80s. FREEZE was established in 1980 with the purpose of urging
and speeding up a freeze of the nuclear arms race. Its group belief stated a firm commitment "to the achievement of a comprehensive bilateral and verifiable freeze
between the United States and the Soviet Union."
Both groups had similar group beliefs and collaborated frequently. The idea of
merging was raised several times, but only in March, 1986 did the two groups begin
negotiation. The newsletter of SANE, Sane World, of September/October, 1986,
reported on the unity talks, noting the similarity between the two groups:
Both groups have made a comprehensive test ban treaty as their number one priority in 1986. Both groups oppose Star Wars and the abandonment of SALT II. Both
Subgrouping
81
groups are working for a redirection of American military policy from nuclear
stockpiling and interventionism to nuclear disarmament and global peace. (p. 1)
When a 17-member commission was set up to negotiate the merger, one of the
two subcommittees was specifically formed to negotiate the new set of group beliefs.
This task was accomplished, and in the spring of 1987 the two groups merged.
In a publication entitled Sane/Freeze in autumn 1987, the co-directors of the new
group wrote:
As we merge, SANE/FREEZE continues to be one of the few disarmament groups
that can mobilize large numbers of its own constituents. . . . By merging, we are
creating a new force in American policy-a large-scale peace organization with
the necessary political clout and clarity of vision to make a real difference in
national policy.
Subgrouping
Another widely observed phenomenon in groups is the emergence of subgrouping.
From the perspective ofthe present conception, this phenomenon indicates that while
all group members accept the basic group beliefs, some of them form and hold additional beliefs, which unite and characterize them as a subgroup. These beliefs can be
considered as subgroup beliefs, which define the "subgroupness." In this case, the
subgroup beliefs differentiate the subgroup from other members of the group. They
provide the boundaries for the subgroup and indicate that those who are subgroup
members subscribe to them, as well as to the basic group beliefs.
Lijphart (1975) described a special case of subgroupings in Dutch society, which
is characterized by religious and class divisions. Each group not only has its own
group beliefs, but also has institutions to support them. Such a fragmented system
could lead to dissension and conflict in the group. Nevertheless, Holland is considered as a stable, democratic society in which potential conflicts are diffused
successfully. Lijphart (1975) explained this paradox by pointing out that there
is agreement on basic group beliefs. Thus, while each group tries to defend and
promote its own interests, at the same time it tries to maintain the system and
support the consensus. According to Lijphart, the most important Dutch group
belief refers to nationalism. This belief is deeply rooted and is reflected in various symbols. Also, the great support for democratic institutions provides an important basis for unity.
Subgrouping takes place especially in large groups, such as political parties or religious denominations. In fact, several political theorists view political parties as a
collection of interest subgroups, a union of small groups, or an association of communities (e.g., Duvenger, 1954; Eldersveld, 1964). However, subgrouping may also
be found in relatively small groups such as small political parties or ideological
groups. Groups may have few, several, or many subgroups. The contents of subgroup beliefs may consist of various topics. It may refer to goals, values, or past
experiences.
82
In many cases, the major goal of subgroups is to change group beliefs. This is often
the main reason for their emergence. In such a case, they advocate the addition,
omission, or change of at least one or more group beliefs. Subgrouping, as an institutionalized mechanism, allows group members to hold a variety of beliefs and to
press for changes in a group. Thus, for example, the Labor Party in Israel has a number of factions with more or less formal membership. Although these factions accept
the political platform of the party formulated in general terms, they disagree about
specific means, goals, or ideological dogma. In this case, the disagreements among
the factions often pertain to desirable solutions to the Israeli-Arab conflict, which
dominates the political arena.
Groups differ with regard to their policy of institutionalizing subgroups that focus
on changing group beliefs. While some groups allow minimal divergence from
group beliefs, others not only tolerate dissent, but also serve as a loose framework
for subgroups with different beliefs. Nevertheless, in both cases, the basic group
beliefs have to be accepted by all the group members, since they serve as a uniting
bond for the subgroups. In groups in which little deviation from group beliefs is
allowed, few subgroups emerge. These groups often utilize control mechanisms to
keep group members in line and severely sanction any deviations. One example of
such a group is the Jehovah's Witnesses. Stroup (1945), who studied this group,
pointed out that
the belief system of the Jehovah's Witnesses is totalitarian. The theology does not
attempt to make a partial inquiry into the nature of reality, but claims to have succeeded already in obtaining the final answer to all important religious problems .
. . . Obviously, such a rigid acceptance of dogma precludes any of the spontaneity
that comes from free, creative attempts at problem solving in the religious area.
The beliefs laid down by Mr. Russell and developed and modified by Mr. Rutherford still remain unchanged for the most part .... The whole movement has been
built on authoritarian method .... For years hyperorthodox Witnesses have lived
in an unquestioning devotion to their leader .... Deviations from the Rutherford
gospel are reported to the central organization .... When heresy is reported to the
central organization, the heretic is brought before a company council and is usually
immediately isolated from other Witnesses. (pp. 124-125)
83
tries to extend his political resources. Nevertheless, each subgroup adds ideological
slogans, which serve as subgroup beliefs and provide identity.
Subgrouping does not necessarily have to be related to goals or ideology. Subgrouping can also be based on other contents, such as past experience or ancestors.
For example, Levy (1975) reported that Lubovitch Hassidim are divided into four
subgroups on the basis of their past ties to the Lubovitch community. The group
differentiates those who have ancestral ties to Lubovitch, those who come from
orthodox Jewish families and join the Lubovitch Hassidim, those who join the group
as recent converts, and those who do not necessarily observe the rituals, but feel
emotionally tied to the group. This system of subgroups affects certain patterns of
interaction within the community.
Subgrouping may also emerge in groups that are greatly preoccupied with shaping
their group beliefs. This is especially true in groups that are in the phase of formulating their group beliefs. In these groups, if the climate allows, group members constantly formulate, reformulate, revise, and change their own beliefs until, as it
sometimes happens, the climate changes and no revisions of group beliefs are
encouraged. In these types of groups, subgrouping is a common phenomenon.
Group members, in their attempt to influence the formulation of group beliefs,
organize themselves into subgroups.
Examples of these cases can be found in small ideological groups whose members
spend much energy in discussing, refining, and changing group beliefs (see Bell,
1952; Rayner, 1986). Bell, in describing the various socialist groups in the United
States in the last century and the beginning of the present one, noted the extensive
subgroupings involved in the definition of groups' ideologies.
In any group the number of subgroups and their size may change over time. Subgroups may merge, split, or disintegrate. These changes may take place as a function
of group processes at large, such as changes in type of leadership, changes in pressure to conform, and changes in group climate. Obviously, changes with regard to
group beliefs may also affect subgrouping. For example, a change of group beliefs
may imply an achievement of an advocated goal and an end of the basis for the
subgroup's existence. However, as long as the structure permits, groups will have
subgroupings.
84
The term bangsa conveys the double ideas of people sharing both a common origin
and a common culture .... It has a primordial quality, for it implies that the cultural traits are inalienably and inextricably associated with a particular people, that
is, carried by a community whose ultimate unity derives from a single origin. (p.
98)
The most important variable that determines whether group beliefs change and
determines the extent of any change is the climate of the group. The climate may restrict any innovative ideas regarding group beliefs or may be tolerant and open with
regard to these changes. An increasingly tolerant climate enables increasingly more
changes to take place. Coser (1954) described, for example, the nature of sects that
are "never tolerant," do not allow departure from group beliefs, press for uniformity,
ostracize deviants, and reward conformity.
Nevertheless, even relatively closed and authoritative groups change group
beliefs. In times of continuously changing environments, facilitated communication
among group members as well as between the in-group and out-groups, and availability of information, it is almost impossible to prevent influences that may affect
group beliefs. It is especially difficult for a group to be effectively closed to information and ideas coming from out-groups. Even if it is closed, though, the group still
must cope with environmental changes consisting of physical (e.g., technology) and
social (e.g., norms, values) aspects which may affect the mental state of the group
(Zald, 1982). Finally, to avoid changes, the group must impose complete control
over members who may produce ideas inconsistent with group beliefs. Thus, even
a relatively closed group like the Amish could not completely isolate themselves in
their environment and has had to absorb changes from out-groups. Hostetler (1968)
noted some of these influences. He wrote:
The general influences of American culture, both material and non-material,
gradually find their way into segments of the Amish. The methods used to keep the
community in bounds, described earlier, are not 100 per cent effective in keeping
the outside out. The following changes have occurred in one or more communities:
Ball bearings have been adopted on carriage wheels. Dairy barns have been remodeled to conform to standards required for selling fluid milk. The young men have
changed from black to brown shoes. Hair is cut shorter than the previous generation. Mothers have changed from cotton to nylon material for some women's garments. Tractors for field work have been allowed. The trend from general to
specialized farming is very apparent. Young men and women have become
interested in education, in occupations other than farming, and in missionary work.
Some Amish districts have gone so far as to allow electricity, ownership of automobiles, and telephones. Kitchens have been modernized with appliances. Bottled gas
in lieu of electricity, milking machines run by small gasoline engines, and refrigerators operated with kerosene are still other changes. The adoption of such innovations requires reintegration of culture and reorganization of values. (p. 323)
85
the exploited masses in bourgeois societies, which can only be resolved by social
revolution. The party believed that the revolution should be carried out by the
proletariat, which will overthrow the autocracy and build a democratic republic, and
that the democratic republic will bring political and civil freedom, universal education, self-determination for all nationalities, election of judges, separation of church
and state, and a militia in place of a standing army.
With the revolution in 1917, the new group beliefs formulated in 1919 accounted
for the changes that took place. Thus, the group beliefs referred to the successful
revolution and a foundation of communist society. They related to the outbreak of
additional revolutions and asserted that a period of wars and imperialism was inevitable. Also, the beliefs condemned the Social Democratic and Socialist parties for
opportunism. Finally, the beliefs referred to the goals of the All-Russian Communist
Party. Later, in 1952, new changes came as the 19th Party Congress resolved that
fundamental changes have taken place both in the sphere of international relations
and in the sphere of the construction of socialism in the USSR, in which connection
many of the propositions set forth in the Program and tasks of the Party expounded
therein ... no longer correspond to modern conditions and the Party's new tasks.
(Triska, 1962, p. 6)
The new group beliefs were formulated only in 1961 and their content looks like
heresy in comparison to 1919 beliefs. They advocate coexistence with imperialism,
grant considerable "rights" to all Soviet people, and do not mention, for example, a
militia or money less economy. It is possible that the new changes advocated
presently by Mikhail Gorbachev will shape new group beliefs of the Soviet Communist Party.
In groups that have a formal listing of group beliefs, a change may also involve
their formal reformulation, as in the previous example of the Soviet Communist
Party. Such reformulation may be the first step in changing group beliefs, as an initiation of change, or it may be done in the course of the changing process. Sometimes,
a formal reformulation is only a validation of an already shared belief after the group
members themselves have changed the group belief. In any event, the formal change
of beliefs is a symbolic act that is often important for a group's life.
Changes of group beliefs can originate from the same sources that initiate all
the other changes in the group's life. Both the leader's initiatives and the minority's
influence play an important role in changing group beliefs. Leaders who initiate
changes and innovations may also decide to alter group beliefs. Such a move may
reflect their own convictions and/or a compliance with group members' needs. The
latter condition is probably necessary if group members are to adopt the change.
The new group beliefs are accepted by group members to the extent that they
are functional for their needs (Bar-Tal, Y., 1989b; Griffin, Skivington, & Moorhead, 1987; McCall & Lombardo, 1978). This latter condition applies to all situations of change in group beliefs. Group members' needs playa role in the acceptance
of new group beliefs.
An analysis of change in group beliefs of the Woman's Christian Temperance
Union (WCTU) from the 1880s to 1950s provides an example of the relationship
86
between group members' needs and group beliefs (Gusfield, 1955). With the establishment of the group in 1874, the group beliefs mostly focused on the improvement
of morality and of economic conditions of women. Specifically, the beliefs pertained
to such topics as long working hours, low wages, and child labor. After 1900, while
the humanitarian group beliefs regarding change in economic conditions became
less central, the group beliefs concerning temperance and morality became more
prominent. One example of this change was a new emphasis on the destructiveness
of the drinking habit. With time, group beliefs about morality and temperance continued to gain centrality, while group beliefs of humanitarian interest lessened in
importance. These changes took place because group members changed and different group beliefs appealed to different members. While in the early stages of group
existence, group members were mostly from the upper middle class and were preoccupied with humanitarian beliefs; later, the membership shifted to the lOwer classes,
who were more receptive to temperance issues.
With regard to a subgroup's attempts to change group beliefs, a recent burgeoning
of work in social psychology can shed light on the conditions that facilitate minority
influence (e.g., Levine & Moreland, 1985; Maass & Clark, 1984; Moscovici, 1976;
Moscovici, Mugny, & Van Avermaet, 1985; Mugny, 1982). The findings of this line
of research suggest the following: (a) the influence of a minority develops with time
and usually is not found in the initial phases of group formation; (b) the influence
of a minority often appears to be latent; (c) the influence of a minority is mediated
by an innovation process that offers new ideas to group members' repertoire; (d) the
influence of a minority is mostly carried out through behavioral style-in order to
be effective, a minority must be consistent, coherent, and forceful, but also flexible
in pressing for a change; (e) a minority will be more successful in changing group
beliefs if it argues for a position in line with the general social climate of group members (i.e., the social zeitgeist); and (f) minorities are also more likely to succeed
when they are similar to the majority in all respects except for the group beliefs that
they are striving to change.
Any change of group beliefs requires a modification of the group members'
repertoire. Group beliefs are changed when group members share the new belief
and consider it as characterizing their uniqueness. This is a long gradual process that
may require dissemination of the new beliefs and persuasion of group members to
make the change. Group members are the ones who have to hold the new group
beliefs. Only when the new beliefs are accepted and shared is the process of change
completed.
Group Schism
Since splits within groups are frequently the result of disagreements over group
beliefs, one way of analyzing the schism process is to focus on these beliefs. In situations of such disagreements, some of the group members, who frequently are
organized in a subgroup, try to omit, add, and/or formulate at least some of the group
beliefs. When the disagreement involves the most important group beliefs and no com-
Group Schism
87
promise can be found as a solution, then a schism may take place. The members of
the subgroup then leave and form a new group with new group beliefs. An example
of a split over group beliefs is the case of the Clamshell Alliance, an antinuclear protest group active in New England during the late 1970s (Downey, 1986). The Clamshell Alliance was established in July, 1976, in direct reaction to the building of the
Seabrook nuclear power plant in southeastern New Hampshire. The basic beliefs of
the group pertained to stopping the construction ofthe plant by using direct, nonviolent action as a strategy. In addition, group beliefs defined the egalitarian identity of
the organization. Over time, some of the group members challenged these two main
group beliefs and suggested changing the consensus decision-making process and
using civil disobedience as a means for achieving the goal. Since the majority of the
group members did not agree with changing these beliefs, a small part of the group
members left to establish their own organization, The Coalition for Direct Action in
Seabrook. The group beliefs of the new group referred to civil disobedience as a
strategy in the struggle to close the plant and required a 75% majority rule to make
decisions. The Clamshell Alliance continued to adhere to its nonviolent strategy, but
changed the consensus principle to 90% majority rule (Downey, 1986).
Splits are not necessarily based on disagreements about group beliefs, but when
this is the case, they can take place in at least one of two possible ways: (a) A subgroup may decide that it does not accept the group beliefs and therefore decides to
leave the parent group, or (b) the parent group may force the subgroup to leave when
the latter challenges the basic group beliefs.
In the first way, in the course of a disagreement, the subgroup members decide
that they cannot change group beliefs to their satisfaction and therefore feel that
they cannot be part of the parent group. In view of this, the subgroup members often
think that they ought to leave their group and establish a new group with different
group beliefs. In this case, the subgroup initiates the split and carries it out. An
example of this case is the breaking away of a group, later labeled as the Social
Democratic Party, from the British Labor Party. This group opposed the leftist platform of the Labor Party, which advocated large-scale nationalization, prohibition by
law of nons tate education or medicine, single chamber government, and withdrawal
from the Common Market. Because the subgroup was unable to change these
beliefs, the subgroup left the party to form a separate political group, the Social
Democratic Party (Lindley, 1985).
In the second way, the parent group initiates the split by expelling the subgroup
that tries to change group beliefs. In this case, the group members do not agree to
change group beliefs and decide that the challenge of the subgroup threatens group
unity and efficacy. Therefore, the parent group may cause the split by forcing the
subgroup to leave. An illustration of this type of split was provided by Rayner
(1986), who analyzed the schisms within the Socialist Worker's Party (previously
called International Socialists), a small Trotskyist group in Great Britain. According
to the analysis, the party went through ideological changes that consolidated it as a
centralized combat organization in the Leninist tradition. In the course of the party's
departure from an egalitarian outlook with a democratic framework, a number of
groups were forced to leave for not accepting the party's line. Thus, for example,
Rayner described the departure of the Revolutionary Opposition (a subgroup in the
88
party) as a result of criticism of the party leader's economic beliefs. After the criticism, the group was forced to part company with the parent organization to form the
Worker's League-a new political group.
Once a group splits, the new group will try to differentiate itself from the parental
group. The establishment of the new group's own identity is one of its most important tasks. This differentiation is accomplished by emphasizing the uniqueness of
the new group and its differences from the parent group. Therefore, special efforts
are directed to the formulation and elaboration of the new group beliefs, which
demarcate the boundary of the new group and define its special characteristics. The
formulated group beliefs have to be noticeably different from the group beliefs of the
parent group in order to justify the schism. In the first phase of the formation of the
new group, group members make special efforts to disseminate and maintain their
group beliefs in order to consolidate their group's existence.
Worchel (1984) proposed a three-stage model of group schism, paying special
attention to the establishment of a new identity by the separating group. According
to the description, in the first stage- the period of discontent- some of the group
members experience dissatisfaction and disenchantment. They feel, on an individuallevel, that the group does not satisfy their needs. If the group does not address
this problem, then the next stage may take place. Two factors may retard the movement to the next stage: (a) an appeal to group loyalty or patriotism, or (b) identification of an outside threat. In the second stage, the discontented group is drawn
together, usually following a crisis or a dramatic event. The process of differentiation continues until the group shapes its own identity, which is a characteristic of the
third stage. In this stage, the group completes the separation process by drawing
clear boundaries, which are reflected in the expression of extreme and uncompromising positions in direct opposition to the parent group's beliefs. The new group
formulates its own set of group beliefs, and, in order to close its own ranks, it not
only confronts the parent group, but it also develops a climate of rigidity, intolerance, and conformity. It is at this time that "the group often adopts a name, symbol,
dress code or uniform, and even a language of its own" (p. 14). After the formation
of its own identity and increased cohesiveness, the group moves to the last stage,
that of moderation. In this stage, the new group may develop openness as well as
cooperation with other groups, including the parent group.
While political groups often merge and split, among religious groups the latter
process, called schism, is predominant. Most of the analyses of religious schism suggest that it develops through three stages. First, within a denomination differences
of opinion arise over group beliefs. Then, the differences escalate into conflict.
Finally, the losing side may leave in order to establish a new denomination (e.g.,
Etzioni, 1975b; Lehman, 1980). Obviously, the dissident members, if they are not
expelled and if they still strive to maintain their group membership, must either
become secessionists within the tradition by adopting several new subgroup beliefs
while still adhering to the basic group beliefs, or remain in the group, continuing to
subscribe to group beliefs and simultaneously attempting to change them in institutionalized ways.
Group Schism
89
Wilson (1971), analyzing schism within religious groups, suggested that the
departing group usually has a disagreement with the parent group over group beliefs
pertaining to norms. The allegation often concerns the claim that the parent group
departed from the originally formulated group beliefs. In the three analyzed cases,
the Protestant Methodist Church left Methodism in 1828 in its attempt to restore the
pristine principles of Wesleyanism; the Hicksites separated from Quakers in 1827
because the Hicksites wanted an egalitarian structure in the church; and the
Brethren split into Open and Exclusive over the issue of Christ's suffering and the
question of open communion. More recently, a schism has taken place in the Protestant Episcopal Church in the U.S.A. (PECDSA) following the decisions to ordain
women as priests and to rewrite the 1928 Book of Common Prayer. Thousands of
Episcopalians have disagreed with these decisions, which they claim violate the
basic group beliefs, and so they have left the church.
Hostetler (1968), analyzing the case of the Amish split from the Swiss Anabaptist
movement, elaborated on more phases in the development of sectarian groups.
Applying these phases to the present conception of group beliefs suggests that the
split takes place in the following process: (a) new beliefs, different from the parent's
group beliefs, are formed; (b) a leader with authority promotes the new beliefs and
organizes his followers; (c) the leader imposes sanctions on opposing persons or
groups; (d) additional specific beliefs are added to make the subgroup unique; and
(e) the new group is formed and the new group beliefs differentiate the group from
the parent group.
In the case of the Amish split from the Swiss Anabaptist movement, the former
group challenged the main movement on three issues: the avoidance of the excommunicated members (Meidung), the excommunication of a woman who had admitted speaking a falsehood, and the belief that the sympathizers of Anabaptists who do
not join the group would be saved (Treuherzigen) (Hostetler, 1968). For all these
issues, the Amish group, under the leadership of Jakob Ammann, formed its own
subgroup beliefs, which preached avoidance of the excommunicated member,
excommunication of the lying woman, and rejection of the belief that the sympathizers can be saved. As the subgroup beliefs were formulated, Jakob Ammann
polarized the group by demanding a clear decision from Anabaptist communities on
these three issues. With time, the subgroup began to differentiate itself even more
as new beliefs were added. The subgroup began to have communion service twice
a year instead of once a year. The subgroup members began to practice footwashing,
to dress uniformly, and to cease to trim their beards. As the pressure by Jakob
Ammann to accept the subgroups' beliefs increased, the split was inevitable. Finally,
the subgroup parted and established its own separate entity, which, in this stage,
expressed much animosity toward the parent group.
All the described models of splits contain similar elements, but differ in the
emphases and details they describe. Nevertheless, it is obvious that they all focus on
the disagreement about group beliefs as a main cause for the split.
A number of conditions that may determine whether a split will take place have
been suggested (Turner & Killian, 1957; Wilson, 1971):
90
1. a schism is less likely when the dissenting subgroup is well integrated into the
parent group;
2. a schism is less likely if the parent group has the power to suppress dissension;
3. a schism is less likely when the parent group has the ability to absorb the dissenting group, either by changing group beliefs or accommodating variability;
4. a schism is more likely in a group in which subgrouping easily takes place;
5. a schism is more likely in groups that are either highly centralized or decentralized, the former because nondecision-making powers are invested in the lower
group members and the latter because there is diffusion of coordination and
integration;
6. a schism is less likely in groups in which group beliefs pertain to the importance
of the group's existence;
7. a schism is less likely in groups with charismatic leaders;
8. a schism is more likely in groups characterized by either extreme dogmatism or
extreme openness;
9. a schism is more likely in groups that do not have institutionalized mechanisms
to resolve internal conflict; and
10. a schism is more likely in groups that do not provide channels for expressing
grievances.
Disintegration
Groups not only merge or split, but also sometimes cease to exist. Although the latter process occurs for many reasons, the present conception focuses on one reason,
namely, group beliefs' decadence. In the present view, disintegration takes place
either when group members lose their confidence in group beliefs or when group
beliefs become so peripheral in the group members' repertoire that they are almost
never accessible.
The first process may take place when group members receive information that
contradicts group beliefs and is successfully established as valid. In this case, the
verified, contradictory information causes the validity of group beliefs to decrease.
If new beliefs are not substituted for the invalidated beliefs, then the group loses its
main basis for identity and, therefore, disintegrates. An example of this situation is
the previously described case of the Clamshell Alliance and the Direct Action Task
Force, which both disintegrated (Downey, 1986). Both groups carried out unsuccessful activities because they did not succeed in substituting the old group beliefs
with new ones. Disagreements over group beliefs and failures paralyzed activity and
group members lost interest in their respective groups.
The latter cognitive process occurs when group beliefs cease to be relevant for
group members. Implicitly, then, such group beliefs do not satisfy their needs
anymore and therefore lose their importance (Zald & Ash, 1965). This process is
stimulated by changing conditions in the environment and/or by changing needs of
group members. In both cases, static group beliefs, which are not adapted to natural
changes, lose their relevance and the process of disintegration begins. The case of
Summary
91
the disintegration of the Townsend organization is an example of this situation (Messinger, 1955). The Townsend National Recovery Plan Organization was established
in the early 1930s with the goal of "bringing about full industrial production for the
Nation ... and make jobs for jobless." During the Depression, its group beliefs
advocated a specific plan oflinking pensions to economic reconstruction. However,
following World War II, the national membership of the organization declined about
97% from about 2.2 million members in 1936. The main reason for the decline was
the irrelevance of group beliefs in new postwar economic conditions. As a result,
group members lost interest in group beliefs and the group disintegrated.
Loss of group beliefs is the loss of group identity. It indicates that the group's
boundaries cease to exist, and the group is not differentiated from out-groups. In
this situation, group members lose interest in group activities and the group's cohesiveness decreases. Gradually, the membership declines and, finally, the group disintegrates.
Summary
Multiple membership in groups is one of the salient characteristics of the human
beings. Individuals form groups and spend almost all their lives participating in
their activities. In the course of individuals' participation, the groups continuously
change as group members themselves persistently form new ideas, modify old ones,
and constantly react to and act upon their environment.
There are many different ways to look upon the formation of groups and the
transformations they go through. The present conception suggests looking at the
cognitive products of group members as a framework for understanding group
organization and change. Group members form group beliefs that serve as a uniting
bond for their existence. Subsequently, these beliefs function as a prism through
which it is possible to comprehend various dynamics of group changes.
Groups merge, form subgroups within their framework, change their essence,
split, and disintegrate. In all these processes group beliefs play an important role. In
many cases, the focus of these dynamics revolves around group beliefs. Groups, for
example, can merge only when their group beliefs are similar. Also, groups split
when group members strongly disagree about their group beliefs, and groups disintegrate when group members lose their interest in group beliefs. It is the analysis
of group beliefs and their evolvement that sheds a particular light on the changes that
take place in groups.
Chapter 7
This chapter analyzes a particular example of group beliefs: Germans'delegitimizing beliefs about Jews from 1933 to 1945. There is no doubt that the analysis of a
nation's group beliefs is a presumptuous task. An analysis of small-group group
beliefs is much easier to perform. But this is precisely the reason I decided to illustrate group beliefs within a societal framework. A convincing case of group beliefs
in a large group can be more easily generalized to small groups. Nations, like small
groups, have group beliefs, which, as will be described, define their identity and
affect their behavior. Specifically, I would like to propose that during the Nazi
regime delegitimizing beliefs were widely shared by Germans and defined their
"groupness;' that is, these beliefs served as group beliefs. In presenting this case, this
chapter will first define the concept of delegitimization.
Delegitimization
As indicated, one category of group beliefs may consist of specific negative beliefs
that one group may have about another group. In particular, I am referring to beliefs
of delegitimization, that is, beliefs that downgrade another group with extreme negative social categories for the purpose ofexcluding it from human groups that are considered as acting within the limits of acceptable norms and/or values (Bar-Tal, D.,
1989c). In other words, these group beliefs deny the humanity ofthe delegitimized
group. Dehumanization, outcasting, negative trait characterization, use of political
labels, and group comparison are among the most commonly used contents of
delegitimization (see, for example, Bar-Tal, D., 1988). Dehumanization involves
categorizing a group as inhuman either by using categories of subhuman creatures
such as inferior races and animals, or by using categories of negatively valued
superhuman creatures such as demons, monsters, and satans. Trait characterization
is done by using traits that are evaluated as extremely negative and unacceptable to
a given society. The use of labels such as aggressors, idiots, or parasites exemplifies
this type of delegitimization. Outcasting consists of categorization into groups that
94
are considered to be violators of pivotal social norms. Out casting may include such
categories as murderers, thieves, psychopaths, or maniacs. The society usually
excludes these violators from its system and often places them in total institutions,
such as prisons or psychiatric hospitals.
The use of political labels involves categorization into political groups that are
considered to be totally unacceptable by the members of the delegitimizing society,
as for example, Nazis, fascists, communists, or imperialists. These groups often
threaten the basic values of the given society and are considered a danger to its system. Delegitimization by group comparison consists of labeling the delegitimized
group with the name of another group that serves as an example of negativity in the
given society. The use of such categories as "Vandals" or "Huns" is an example of this
type of delegitimization. Each society has in its cultural repertoire examples of other
groups or societies that serve as symbols of malice, evil, or wickedness.
The definition and the methods of delegitimization not only imply the use of
extremely negative and unique contents, the rejection of the delegitimized group to
the point' of denying its humanity, and the accompanying intensely negative emotions, but also behavioral intentions. Since the contents of delegitimization imply
negative behavior that the delegitimized group performs or can potentially enact,
the delegitimizing group often feels compelled to take extreme actions in order to
avert danger. Thus, delegitimization is often related to negative behavior that the
delegitimizing group performs toward the other group (see Bar-Tal, D., in press-b).
The contents of the delegitimizing beliefs may be shared by group members and
considered to be one of the characterizations of their groupness. In this case, the
delegitimizing beliefs become group beliefs. The most salient example of the above
case is the delegitimizing beliefs about Jews held by many Germans during the Nazi
regime. The Nazis placed delegitimizing beliefs about Jews at the very core of their
ideology (Gordon, 1984; Mosse, 1964; Wistrich, 1985), and the Nazis' ascendence
to power enabled them to turn these delegitimization beliefs into group beliefs. In
fact, accepting Nazi ideology or even merely supporting the Nazi regime meant, in
reality, at least partially adopting their views about Jews, because every aspect of life
in Germany between 1933 and 1945 was stamped by these beliefs. That is, these
delegitimizing beliefs were not only part of the German dominant ideology, but also
became part of the formal laws, folkways, morals, and Gemeinschaft. Thus, the
behavior of every ordinary citizen in Germany, in many life domains, was a direct
derivative of the delegitimizing beliefs about Jews.
As Dawidowicz (1975) noted:
Anti-Semitism was the core of Hitler's system of beliefs and the central motivation
for his policies. He believed himself to be the savior who would bring redemption
to the German people through the annihilation of the Jews, that people who embodied, in his eyes, the Satanic hosts .... Generations of anti-Semitism had prepared
to accept Hitler as their redeemer. Layer upon layer of anti-Semitism of all kindsChristian church teachings about the Jews, Volkist anti-Semitism, doctrines of
racial superiority, economic theories about the role of Jews in capitalism and commerce, and a half-century of political anti-Semitism - were joined with the solder
of German nationalism, providing the structural foundation upon which Hitler and
the National Socialist movement built. (pp. 163-164)
95
96
September I, Germany attacked Poland and the Second World War began. From this
date until the surrender of Nazi Germany on May 9, 1945, the Germans carried out
an implication of their extreme delegitimizing beliefs- the extermination of European Jewry. This was a genocide on an unprecedented scale, which was performed
in a systematic, well-organized, and brutal way (see Staub, 1989). Within 6 years,
about 6 million Jews perished as a consequence of mass executions, systematic gassing, deadly epidemics, and starvation.
This description illustrates how the delegitimizing beliefs, adopted as group
beliefs, were allowed in a relatively short time to perform what is called today a
Holocaust of the Jews (see also Mosse, 1978). Delegitimizing beliefs led to exclusion, social isolation, expropriation and exploitation, expulsions and pogroms, and
ultimately, to genocide. Although it should be noted that the delegitimizing beliefs
were only one determinant of German behavior, they established the foundation for
the political mechanisms to facilitate the described actions. Delegitimizing beliefs
are a necessary, but insufficient, condition for such extreme behavior. Moreover,
the nature of extremely negative behavior is determined by the content of group
beliefs. When the beliefs imply threat, as in the case of the Jews' delegitimization in
Nazi Germany, then an attempt to eliminate the delegitimized group may take place.
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entity and their name was used to delegitimize other groups. Thus, the leaders of the
Soviet Union were labeled "Jewish;' bolshevism was treated as synonymous with
Jewishness, and hostile foreign leaders were also described as Jews. In sum, Jews
were presented as threatening the basic values of Aryan culture, and as satanic and
hostile forces ready to destroy and pollute all that the Germans held sacred.
In a short time, they became a distinct and significant part of the German mass
repertoire (Hamilton, 1982; Mosse, 1964; Steinert, 1977). Moreover, the
delegitimizing beliefs about Jews set the parameters for the normative behavior during a 12-year period. That is, they implied a whole system of behavior, which was
practiced by Germans. An interesting analysis by Gordon (1984) points to the
gradual increase in the acceptance of the behavioral implications deriving from the
delegitimizing beliefs by Germans. It indicates that in the early years of the Nazi
regime the public merely supported restrictions on Jews' employment, education,
and business, but did not support violent acts. In later years, evidence shows that
Germans supported deportation and physical attack. According to Gordon's analysis, the delegitimizing beliefs were fully accepted by the Germans, although they
probably objected to complete extermination. That is, in principle, Germans
accepted the core of the delegitimizing beliefs that indicated that Jews are
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99
100
anti-Semitic beliefs. In the totalitarian Nazi regime all means were used to achieve
the end of delegitimizing Jews.
Special effort was directed to the use of the printed word. The editors of every
printed outlet was instructed to raise racial issues, including attacks on the historically detrimental role of Jews in Germany and the world, their crimes against the
public, or their evil character (Bramsted, 1965; Gordon, 1984; Zeman, 1964).
Within this general drive, special attention was given to two books: Hitler's Mein
Kampf, in which he summarized his ideas, and Protocols of the Elders of Zion, one
of the most vicious anti-Semitic books. Hundreds of thousands of copies of both
books were printed and considered as required literature during the Nazi regime.
In Mein Kampf, Hitler expounded on race as the central principle of human existence and explicated the relationship between the Aryans and the Jews. According
to Hitler, the resurrection of Germany would never be achieved "without the
knowledge of the racial problem and hence of the Jewish problem." In his view, the
basic conflict is racial rather than political, economic, or societal. It is an apocalyptic conflict between the Aryans and the Jews, between good and evil.
This framework was even an underlying factor in Hitler's definition of the worker.
In principle, the worker was anybody who was of Aryan blood and who toiled with
his brain or his hand to make an honest living. The natural enemy of the worker was
the Jew, who was thought to live unproductively by exploiting honest German folk.
In this vein, Hitler described how Jews pursue world domination and how, through
capitalism, liberalism, democracy, and bolshevism, they try to change the social
order in order to control the masses. The Aryan race, bearer of human culture and
civilization, was chosen to rule the world, but first it had to get rid of Jews, who personify evil and the Devil.
To demonstrate Hitler's extreme anti-Jewish beliefs, Jackel (1981) provided a partiallist of expressions that Hitler used in his book to describe the Jews:
"The Jew is a maggot in a rotting corpse"; "he is a plague worse than the Black
Death of former times"; "a germ-carrier of the worst sort"; "mankind's eternal germ
of disunion"; "the drone which insinuates its way into the rest of mankind"; "the
spider that slowly sucks the people's blood at its pores" .... (p. 58)
Protocols of the Elders of Zion was also given a prominent place in the effort to
spread the delegitimizing beliefs about Jews. This book claimed to provide the
evidence for the Jewish plot to control the world. It was originally forged by the
czarist secret police at the turn of this century, and its contents describe meetings of
Jewish leaders in which they contemplate their secret plans of conspiracy. The book
first appeared in German in 1920, and, during the Nazi regime, it received a prominent place. On its basis, innumerable articles and pamphlets were written and later
distributed.
Spreading the delegitimizing beliefs about Jews was accomplished not only
directly through ideological books or propaganda pamphlets, but also through literary works and daily newspapers. For example, Eher, the official Nazi publishing
house, issued novels in which a description of Jewish cruelty was the central theme.
Also, the press was directed to present the delegitimizing beliefs. Specific anti-
101
Semitic materials that appeared in speeches, publications, or films were recommended. Moreover, specific terminology was dictated in order to describe the issue.
Thus, for example, the emphasis was on "criminality" and the "conspiracy" of Jews
against Germany (Gordon, 1984). Of special distinction toward achievement ofthis
goal was the journal Der Sturmer, which, under the editorship of Julius Streicher,
presented the most vicious attacks on Jews in its articles, pictures and caricatures.
The journal, which appealed to sexual-sadistic instincts, helped to spread antiSemitism among Germans and to establish a general atmosphere of intimidation.
Even children were not spared from direct propaganda aimed at delegitimizing
Jews. German children and adolescents were taught to hate and despise Jews. Many
school books contained anti-Semitic contents and pictures which depicted the Jews
as evil. Also, the teachers were directed to devote special lessons to discuss the Jewish question. Out of school, much of the children's literature focused on anti-Semitic
stories. For example, Der Stumer published a picture book in which the devil was
presented as the father of the Jews and continued with frightening illustrations portraying Jews in satanic ways, and as polluters of German blood and life.
The intellectual sector, including the universities, also took part in this antiSemitic, orchestrated "festival." In some universities efforts were devoted to substantiating, confirming and extending the beliefs of delegitimization about Jews.
University professors like Hans Giinther, Johann von Leers, and Siegfried Passarge
specialized in the study of the Jewish race and the differences between Jews and
Aryans. Their studies provided "scientific" justification for the Nazi doctrine. For
example, Johann von Leers, who was a full professor at the University of Jena,
specialized in the Protocols and other tales. In the foreword to his 1942 book, The
Criminal Nature o/the Jews, he wrote:
If the hereditary criminal nature of Jewry can be demonstrated, then not only is
each people morally justified in exterminating the hereditary criminals - but any
people that still keeps and protects Jews is just as guilty of an offense against public
safety as someone who cultivates cholera germs without observing the proper
precautions.
Nazis even used art in their attempt to control people's beliefs and to spread antiSemitism, removing the distinction between art and propaganda (Milton, 1980).
Racial anti-Semitism was a theme which Nazis thought was important to emphasize
in German art. On the one hand, they encouraged a focus on the beauty and nobility
of the Aryans, while, on the other hand, they emphasized the ugliness and repulsiveness of the Jews. For example, in November 1939 a Munich exhibit entitled "Wandering Jew" was aimed at showing the history of Jews in a delegitimizing way.
The German film industry produced a number of tracts in which the delegitimizing beliefs of Jews were the major themes. Die Rothschilds. Jud Suss, and Der Ewige
Jude are three notable examples of anti-Semitic films (Richards, 1973). In all of the
delegitimizing films, Jews were stereotyped in their physiognomy, their manner of
talking, their clothing, and their body structures. They looked greasy, fat, hooknosed, black-haired, and wore traditional Jewish clothes. More importantly, these
films portrayed Jews as physically repellent, extremely greedy and sneaky, driven by
102
sexual urges, exploiting Germans, performing evil deeds, and exhibiting sinister and
satanic behavior. The films highlight the fundamental difference between Jews and
Germans- between the good, noble, pure Aryans and evil, rotten, and shrewd Jews.
In the most focused documentary about Jews, Der ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew), the
narrator says:
Jews have no indigenous civilization; they are unclean; they are not poor, they
simply prefer to live in a state of squalor; their community life is on the streets; they
hardly ever make anything for themselves; they do not want to work. Their only
desire is to trade; their pride lies in haggling over a price. They have no ideals;
their divine law teaches them to be selfish, to cheat any non-Jew. (Richards, 1973,
p.345)
Each group strives to maintain its uniformity, which is one of the bases for a
group's existence. Members of an enduring group are likely to display at least some
103
central beliefs of striking homogeneity. Lack of group uniformity may cause a low
level of cohesiveness in a group and may even result in its disintegration. To avoid
such processes, a group often applies pressures on their members to bring about
uniformity of beliefs, attitudes and behaviors. Delegitimization of Jews was one of
the primary ways to enforce unity. It allowed "the transformation of the ideology
into a 'fighting movement; for it made the abstract concrete for the purposes of mass
suggestion" (Mosse, 1966, p. xxvii). The delegitimizing beliefs about Jews first
allowed the Nazi party to unite, and later the German people as a whole (Mosse,
1964). By promoting anti-Semitism the Nazis succeeded in uniting the middle and
working classes of Germany. This emphasis provided a legitimate call for German
transformation (Mosse, 1964). Once these simple and acceptable beliefs became
group beliefs, they defined the boundaries of the German nation. They w,ere the
uniting glue that channeled various disagreements, frustrations, and disappointments into an area of wholesale agreement.
The pressure to maintain uniformity is applied especially in situations of threat.
It therefore is not surprising that one major objective of delegitimization was to
create a symbol of energy and evil (Cohn, 1967). The delegitimizing beliefs about
Jews with their demonological content provided the evidence for the possible
threat. Accordingly, delegitimization of Jews not only strengthened party unity,
but also aimed at the creation of consensus and the isolation of opponents. The threat
of Jewry was used as a justification for attack on rival socialists, communists, or
churchmen. Groups that opposed Nazi policies were identified as Jewish sympathizers. The Nazi regime applied extremely high pressure to maintain the
delegitimizing beliefs, including all means of terror (Allen, 1965; Bracher, 1971).
Individuals who opposed the delegitimizing beliefs were punished severely, including punishment by death, while conformists were presented as exemplars of German society.
Moreover, the delegitimization of the Jews not only served as a uniting vehicle and
as a justification for an elimination of internal opposition, but also as a justification
for a war: Nazis consistently identified Germany's enemies (Britain, the United
States, the Soviet Union, or Poland) as being dominated by Jews and, therefore, a
threat to Germany. Any criticism of German policy abroad served as evidence for
Jewish world conspiracy.
As early as the late 30s, groups of psychologists who explored the link between
frustration and aggression connected the frustrations of Germans with the ease with
which they adopted overt anti-Semitism (Dollard et a!., 1939). Delegitimization of
Jews served to displace anger, frustration, or disappointment from an original, often
ambiguous target. Later, several historians pointed to the scapegoating functions
that the delegitimization of Jews fulfilled (e.g., Glaser, 1964; Gordon, 1984). Glaser
noted that
the Jewish minority in Germany was large enough to serve as the general garbage
dump of resentments and as an outlet for uncompensated feelings of inferiority. On
the other hand, it was so small and encapsulated that discrimination would not
bring about any particular damage to the socio-economic fabric of the people.
(p. 220)
104
Gordon pointed out that scapegoating allowed the Nazi regime "to divert the population from other issues, particularly those vague promises of economic and social
change that the Nazis had not fulfilled" (p. 149).
Summary
The above analysis suggests that in Nazi Germany, the delegitimizing beliefs about
Jews served as group beliefs for two main reasons. First, they were widely shared by
the German population. Second, they were used to define the groupness of German
people. They provided a common basis with which Germans could identify and
through which they defined the boundaries of their own group. All of the institutions
of the German society formally adopted and practiced delegitimizing beliefs about
Jews. These group beliefs were the most common and useful weapons of Nazi
propaganda as a revolutionary catalyst. From Nazi ideology, Germans grew to
accept the deep-rooted beliefs that Jews were responsible for the alienation of
humanity from the natural order and were the main obstacle to human redemption.
Therefore, Germans were convinced that it was necessary to exclude Jews from the
economic, political, societal, and cultural aspects oflife and to deny their humanity.
The success of the Nazis in turning the delegitimizing beliefs about Jews into
group beliefs can be explained both by the existing background of anti-Semitism in
the German society and later by the widespread acceptance of, approval of, and collaboration with the Nazi dogma (Hartmann, 1984). Concerning the latter explanation, the Nazi dogma significantly helped to shape the reality of the German people
because it was absorbed by the overwhelming majority of Germans.
The present approach suggests that adherence to group beliefs insures group
endurance and cohesion. It therefore is not surprising that once the delegitimizing
beliefs became group beliefs, Nazis exerted special efforts to maintain and
strengthen them. Since the anti-Semitic beliefs were the focus of the Nazi dogma,
a rejection of these beliefs implied, in actuality, an opposition to Nazi ideology.
Thus, while some of the Germans readily compiled and accepted the beliefs, many
Germans accepted them because they identified with the fUhrer, or they internalized
the beliefs in the process of their socialization and persuasion (Steinert, 1977).
Over time, as the delegitimizing beliefs about Jews became group beliefs, Germans ascribed much validity to them and they became central in the German repertoire. They became part of the German ethos and were formally institutionalized.
Indeed, German delegitimizing beliefs about Jews dominated the public repertoire,
affecting every aspect of life until May 8, 1945.
Chapter 8
Implications
The proposed conception implies that group beliefs, like all beliefs, exist in the
individual's mind. It does not suggest viewing them as a special entity of the "group
mind" category, in the sense that they are superindividual. Beliefs are related to
individuals. Groups, organizations, societies, or any other collectivities do not hold
beliefs on the collective level-only individual members in the aggregate groups do.
However, the present conception describes a widely recognized phenomenon: that
group members share beliefs and that these beliefs may be viewed as defining the
essence of the group as a whole. That is, it suggests that group beliefs are more than
a mere sum of group members' personal beliefs. Sharing of beliefs by group members and a recognition that beliefs characterize them provide group beliefs with distinguished properties. These structural properties of a dynamic whole, a group, are
different from the structural properties of the comprising parts, the individuals. In
this vein, Lewin (1947) pointed out that "There is no more magic behind the fact that
groups have properties of their own, which are different from the properties of their
subgroups or their individual members, than behind the fact that molecules have
properties, which are different from the properties of the atoms or ions of which
they are composed" (p. 8). These properties have important implications for group
members as individuals and for the group as a whole. These implications will now
be discussed.
106
8. Implications
at least one group belief. The fundamental group belief, "We are a group;' shared
by group members is a basis on which other group beliefs are added. Group beliefs,
which characterize the group, demarcate its boundaries with the out-groups. They
differentiate between the in-group and out-group members by underlying the
uniqueness of the group. Group members acquire group beliefs and hold them in
their repertoire.
Group Beliefs as a Basis for Group Members' Reality
Second, group beliefs provide the psychological framework that allows group members to structure their social reality about the group. The structure of social reality
is provided on the basis of the information that group beliefs furnish. This reality is
held with certainty because group members tend to attribute high confidence to their
contents, considering them as facts and verities. Along this line, Turner and Giles
(1981) suggested that on the basis of self-categorization as group members, individuals "change the content of the self-concept from individual differences and
unique personality traits to shared stereotypes of attitudes, values, goals, norms, etc.
associated with social category membership" (p. 27). As a consequence, there is
enhancement of perceptual interchangeability among the group members, which, in
turn, produces mutual cohesiveness and even relative uniformity.
Also, group beliefs facilitate the symbolic communication within a group. Group
members form their own symbols, which often are unique to their group, and they
attribute the same meaning to many other symbols. By sharing the symbols that
are always underlain by beliefs, they acquire a common understanding, at least
on matters related to this group. This is one of the bases of their uniformity and commonality.
In this respect, group beliefs may be viewed as glasses through which group members perceive their group. The more central the group beliefs are in the group members' repertoire and the more complete they are in covering various aspects of group
members' lives, the wider are the perspectives of these glasses. In groups in which
group beliefs refer to a wide spectrum of contents covering various aspects of an
individual's life, they provide almost a total perspective on the world. In other
groups, group beliefs may pertain to specific contents and therefore provide a perspective only on a particular issue that serves as the basis for the group's existence.
Furthermore, since group beliefs define the essence of the group, group members
who consider their membership as an important part of their life tend to organize
their personal beliefs accordingly. Group beliefs often provide the frame of reference
for other beliefs. In this situation, group members draw implications from group
beliefs and form personal beliefs consistent with them.
Group Beliefs as a Basis for Group Structure
Group beliefs have an effect not only on group members' cognitive outcomes, but
also on a group's structural characteristics. They may shed light on the traditionally
studied elements of group structure, such as group cohesiveness or subgrouping, as
discussed in Chapters 5 and 6 of this book.
107
In addition, the power of group beliefs is derived from the perception of unity and
commonality that may characterize group members who are aware of sharing group
beliefs. One consequence of this perception is that group beliefs may serve as a basis
for the demands and desires of group members. Leaders of the group usually take into
consideration the group's beliefs when they make decisions that affect the group's life.
Being aware that group members share a belief, are aware of sharing it, and are influenced by the belief in their behavior, leaders pay special attention to group beliefs.
Group beliefs reflect the direction that group members desire to take in their
beha\lior. Therefore, leaders frequently make decisions regarding the group's course
of action that correspond to group beliefs. From the leaders' perspective, group
beliefs may be utilized as a justification for their course of action, since, in many
cases, group beliefs specify group goals, values, or ideology. Of relevance to this
implication is an analysis by Seliktar (1986), who recognizes the contribution of
societal belief systems to a better understanding of leaders' actions in the political
sphere. She proposed that on the basis of the belief system, decision-makers may
select their choices in response to certain contingencies:
108
8. Implications
A belief system may be seen as a set or range of discrete rather than deterministic
alternatives on which decision-makers can act. Given the constraints imposed by
the external and internal environment ofthe foreign policy system, one cannot infer
directly from a collective belief system to a particular decision. Nevertheless, the
belief system can serve as a collective "cognitive map" of the foreign policy environment. (p. 329)
Furthermore, group beliefs serve not only as a basis for selection of a course of
action, but also as standards against which group members and the leaders can
evaluate group progress and adherence to goals.
Group Beliefs and Intergroup Relations
Group beliefs may determine the attitudes and behaviors of an out-group toward the
group. Group beliefs provide important information for out-groups about any given
group. Out-groups learn about group beliefs through formal presentations as well as
through their implicit expressions, such as leaders' speeches. This information
serves as an input in decisions taken in relation to that group. They characterize the
group and may even imply the behavior that the group may take.
Group beliefs may indicate possible goals, ideology, values, history, norms, or
characteristics of the group. This information enables acquaintanceship with the
group and, in turn, influences the type of intergroup relations that may develop.
Group beliefs may imply a threat to another group or possible cooperation. A
contradiction between group beliefs of two groups may lead to conflict and confrontation, whereas similarity of group beliefs may underlie accordance and
collaboration.
Group Beliefs as a Determinant of Group Behavior
Finally, if one assumes that group members act consistently with their beliefs, then
group beliefs may be considered an important source for understanding group
behavior. This assumption was advanced by various social scientists (e.g., Asch,
1952; Axelrod, 1976; Holsti, 1962; Parsons, 1951). Smelser (1963) even defined
collective behavior as "mobilization on the basis of a belief which redefines social
action" (p. 8). He suggested that shared or, as he called them, generalized beliefs, are
necessary for collective action.
Krech and Crutchfield (1948) are among the few social psychologists who pointed
out the relationship between beliefs and group behavior. According to them, "the
double role of beliefs-in shaping action designed to satisfy needs and in creating
new tensions which must be released - becomes particularly important in an analysis of group behavior of people" (p. 386).
Similarly, Sherif and Cantril (1947) noted that
a cardinal fact concerning the behavior of individual members in any collective situation stands out in high relief: the fact that once an individual identifies himself
with a group and its collective actions, his behavior is in a major way determined
109
by the direction of the group action, whatever this direction may be, good or bad,
constructive or destructive. (p. 290)
110
8. Implications
then, describe the basis for group togetherness and influence not only the individuals, but also the structure, processes, and behaviors of the group as a whole.
The present conception shifts the preoccupation with social knowledge from
individuals to groups. It provides a framework to analyze social cognitive processes
and products in social contexts of groups. This framework strengthens the social
perspective of contemporary social psychology. The presented analysis explains uniformity of group members as reflected in their beliefs, which, in turn, influences
their behavior in a direction of commonality. This analysis recognizes individual
differences of members in the same group, but, at the same time, focuses on collec-
111
tive social reality, a relatively disregarded topic of social psychology. It is this reality
that casts social context into the studies of individuals' cognition contents. A similar
point was made by Tajfel (1984) who noted that the
task of social psychology is the study of social situations in which the long-lasting
or temporary identifications with some groups, and differentiations from others,
bring about a large variety of forms of collective behavior which can range from a
carnival organized by an ethnic minority to deep rumblings capable of shaking up
a whole social system. (p. 712)
The study of group beliefs concerns not only group processes or structures, but
also contents per se. The mapping of group beliefs is a necessary condition for
understanding the dynamics of the specific group. The contents indicate the group's
goals, values, or norms. They point out the available repertoire of group members.
The study of contents may describe what beliefs are central or are held with much
confidence (see for example, Bar-Tal, D., 1986, 1988, 1989a, in press-a; Bar-Tal, D.,
& Antebi, 1989). All these topics shed light on group behavior.
Already over three decades ago, Newcomb (1951) noted that
most social psychologists of primarily psychological persuasion take no systematic
account of the facts of the social environment in which human organisms live. More
specifically, they minimize or even ignore the nature of the social structure of
which their subjects are members. (p. 32)
This picture may be changing somewhat, especially in view of recent developments in European social psychology. Contributions by Tajfel (1981, 1982, 1984b),
Turner (1987), Moscovici (1976), Farr and Moscovici (1984), and Billig (1978) suggest new avenues for studying beliefs and attitudes as group products. These avenues
not only introduce social context, but some of them also direct special attention to
macro groups.
Individuals not only engage in dyadic relations, or act in small groups, but are also
members of political parties, religious denominations, ethnic groups, or nations.
This fact cannot be disregarded by social psychologists. Group members' behavior
can be studied on various levels and from different perspectives. As a complementary addition to sociological, anthropological, political, or economic contributions,
social psychologists may provide unique input to the study of large groups by focusing on their cognitive products, the shared beliefs.
112
8. Implications
There is a significant difference between situations in which a belief is held as personal and those in which it is held as a group belief. In the first case, personal beliefs
may explain the individual's affect and behavior, while, in the latter, group beliefs
may shed light on organized and coordinated behavior of group institutions. Taking
a specific example, there is a meaningful difference when an individual or individuals hold prejudiced beliefs and when these beliefs are viewed as group beliefs. On
the basis of the analyzed case of German delegitimizing beliefs aboutJews during the
Nazi era, it becomes apparent that group beliefs have special dynamics and consequences. They may guide the selection of group goals, policies, and coordinated
action. In contrast, personal beliefs (except when held by a leader) or even common
beliefs do not have the same effect and power.
This view is recognized by social scientists who make special efforts to study
shared beliefs, or, as they often call it, belief systems (e.g., Almond & Verba, 1965;
Geertz, 1973; Parsons, 1951). Mannheim (1952) pointed outthatthe thoughts ofthe
individuals are underlain by the collective purpose of a group and "in this connection
it becomes more clear that a large part of thinking and knowing cannot be correctly
understood, as long as its connection with existence or with the social implications
of human life are not taken into account" (p. 241).
Conclusions
Group belief conception provides a cognitive and social perspective for the study of
a group. The existence of a group is a social reality for group members. Group
beliefs provide the basis that allows group members to view the group as a social
reality. The group, then, is a product not only of structural characteristics, environment, situational conditions, motivational tendencies, or social influence, but also
of personal cognitive processes. These processes determine the essence of the
group, since group beliefs provide the contents that serve as bases for group formation and group maintenance.
Beliefs cannot exist independently of individuals or externally to them. Group
members as individuals are the ones who cognize the beliefs and turn them into their
reality. In this respect, group beliefs do not imply anything mystical or supernatural.
Individuals form group beliefs and process them in the same way as personal beliefs.
The intrapersonal process described in Chapter 1 is the one that also describes the
formation and change of group beliefs on a personal level. However, group beliefs
have special meaning different from individuals' beliefs or common beliefs. Since
group members are aware of sharing them, they acquire a special quality, unlike
when individuals hold personal beliefs, are unaware of sharing them, and do not
consider them as characterizing their group.
It is important for social psychologists to study the contents of group beliefs and
the process through which group members acquire them, become aware of sharing
them, and are affected by them in their behavior. This line of interest, on the one
hand, adds a cognitive aspect to the study of a group and, on the other hand, liberates beliefs from their individual closet to extend their social meaning. In this
Conclusions
113
respect, the present approach provides the bridge between the individual's level of
analysis and the group's level. Group members, as individuals, are the ones who
acquire beliefs that shape their reality. However, when group members become
aware of the fact that their beliefs are shared by other group members, these beliefs
acquire a special quality. That is, group beliefs may have important cognitive, affective, and even behavioral implications for the group members as individuals and for
the group as a whole. At the same time, they may also have influence on the structure of the group, as well as on the various social processes that take place in its
framework. Future studies could shed light on these implications.
Postscript
Because the first chapter began with a short description of the nonjustificational
approach to the philosophy of science, which served as a guideline for the analysis
of group beliefs, the ending of this book will discuss the implications of the
presented conception for the development of science. In particular, it will focus on
a functioning of scientific groups and changing of their group beliefs. Thus, this
postscript closes the full circle that began in the first chapter. That is, although some
ideas of the philosophy of science had influence on the present conception, it seems
that, in turn, the framework may illuminate several phenomena related to knowledge formation by scientists.
Groups of Scientists
The discussion of the implications is possible because scientists, like other people,
organize themselves in groups for various purposes, such as to create ideas, to
advance their professional goals, to propagate theories, to define the boundaries of
their disciplines, or to strengthen their professional identity (e.g., Blume, 1974;
Crane, 1972; Mulkay, 1977). In this vein, Kuhn (1970) observed that it is possible
to identify groups of scientists on different levels, beginning with a global community (for example, all natural scientists), continuing through disciplinary communities, to groups that support a specific theory. Such groups of scientists develop
shared definitions of their work, paradigms that interpret findings and guide new
research. In other words, scientists adjust to the problems of dealing with knowledge
in their fields by forming groups of various kinds based upon communication and
shared beliefs.
Scientists' associations within the framework of groups can be either formal or
informal. In the former case, scientists define group goals, set rules, establish channels of communication, elect governing institutions, organize meetings, and even
select group members. Formal groups can be formed to advance science in general (e.g., the American Association for the Advancement of Science), a specific
116
Postscript
can assume that scientific groups, like other groups, have group beliefs. These
group beliefs characterize groups of scientists. Their specific contents can be of
wide scope, such as defining the nature of a subject area (e.g., a discipline), explaining the limits of the membership (e.g., what is required from a person to be accepted
as a group member), describing the content area of interest, designating accepted
methodology, or even naming specific theoretical beliefs that a member has to hold.
A few examples of possible group beliefs taken from written materials will illustrate
some of their contents.
The Jean Piaget Society opens its membership "to anyone interested in the nature
of human knowledge, the processes of knowing and their development" (undated
flier). This society follows the themes of study of Jean Piaget, who "has exerted
seminal influence on all scholars concerned with human knowing and its development. Starting as a biologist interested in the history of scientific thinking, he
approached heretofore exclusive philosophical questions in a resolutely empirical
fashion and created epistemology as a science, separate from philosophy, but interrelated with all human sciences" (undated flier).
The Psychometric Society is composed of a group of individuals interested in the
development of psychology as a quantitative science. The focus of the work of its
members is on developing mathematical models and procedures for analyzing
psychological data.
The International Society of Political Psychology outlines its objective as
117
... to facilitate communication across disciplinary, geographic, and political boundaries among scholars and concerned individuals in government and public posts,
the communications media, and elsewhere who have a scientific interest in the
relationship between political and psychological processes. . .. To increase the
quality, breadth, depth and usefulness of work in political psychology. (undated
brochure)
Kuhn identified four types of shared disciplinary matrix: (a) "symbolic generalizations;' which refer to formalized rules; (b) "metaphysical paradigms;' which refer to
beliefs in particular models and heuristics; (c) ''values;' which provide criteria for
prediction, judgments of theory, etc.; and (d) "exemplars;' which are concrete
problem solutions presented in the discipline.
On the basis of the conception presented in the previous chapters, it is possible to
propose that group beliefs demarcate the boundary for groups of scientists. They
indicate who is a group member and they differentiate various groups within the
scientific community. They define the raison d'etre for the group existence and
describe its essence. In this respect, they establish the identity of scientists' groups.
On their basis it is possible to know a group's unique characteristics. In other words,
group beliefs provide the credo or dogma for a group of scientists. Usually, they
delineate the principles in which scientists believe and refer to basic premises that
unite them in their work. Accordingly, the contents of group beliefs outline the
framework that underlies the scientific endeavor of the particular group.
Furthermore, it can be assumed that an advance of meaningful scientific ideas
requires turning them into group beliefs. Such development implies that the ideas
have followers who accept them, consider them as important, interact on their basis,
and try to disseminate them. Ideas around which groups are not formed may disappear. Similarly, when a group organized around ideas, which serve as group beliefs,
disintegrates or dissolves, these ideas may move into oblivion. The history oflnvariant Theory in mathematics, as described by Fisher (1967), corresponds to the latter
case. With time, for various reasons, the group of Invariant Theorists did not have
a continuation and therefore "Invariant Theory is indeed dead" (p. 243).
Whereas the fundamental group belief ("We are a group") may be formed on the
basis of various experiences (e.g., proximity, common fate), in the case of scientists'
groupS! it is almost always based on the perception of similarity. The perception of
similarity is usually derived from common beliefs in similar, or even same ideas.
These beliefs, which serve as a basis for group formation, are formulated by one or
several scientists. Once the beliefs are formulated, additional scientists who accept
them can join the group. The group can grow, and even become a discipline - the
most common group in science.
Postscript
118
On the basis of these group beliefs, the group functioned. Group members performed studies, exchanged papers, collaborated in their research, organized meetings, and even developed specific patterns of common research and life-style (e.g.,
concentration on few but excellent papers, camping in nature).
In this case, as in other cases, group beliefs functioned as a symbol for defining
group identity and as a glue for the group solidarity (Mullins, 1972). In fact, as it
happened in the phage group, a basis for the formation of a scientific group has to
be a realization by several scientists that they share the same idea(s}. Only subsequently may they set parameters for the group organization.
119
group beliefs (and their change) pertain to theoretical or conceptual content. Then,
a change of group beliefs indicates a modification of a theory, a conception, or some
other premise. A change of group beliefs, either through peaceful modification or
through emergence of a new group with new group beliefs, indicates that new scientific beliefs are formulated. It shows that a group of scientists agrees to share different beliefs than those previously held.
A change of group beliefs is not surprising in view of the relative openness of
science. That is, science by its nature is characterized by criticism, skepticism, disinterestedness, tolerance, and attempts to innovate (Lakatos & Musgrave, 1970;
Merton, 1973). These characteristics imply that group beliefs usually do not freeze.
A freezing of group beliefs implies stagnation and fixation, which negate the nature
of science. The nature of science requires a constant unfreezing of group beliefs.
Although it is hard to judge whether every change in group beliefs indicates
progress, it is definitely possible to say that a change indicates extension of
knowledge, because it usually implies an emergence of new ideas. In this vein, it is
interesting to note that Crane (1969) found that scientists are more committed to
advancing ideas than to their group. The groups serve as means for communication,
while innovation is the name of the game in scientific groups.
The above characterization of science should not imply that scientists always are
open for changes. Even in the present century, groups of scientists have persistently
and obstinately adhered to their group beliefs without considering alternatives.
Barber (1961) provided several notable examples of resistance by scientists to new
ideas in physical and natural sciences. Among them are objections to Lister's theory
of antisepsis, Mendel's theory of genetic inheritance, and Arrhenius' theory of electrolytic dissociation.
Groups of scientists may develop a closed system in order to maintain group
beliefs among group members. Krantz (1972), for example, referred to "scientific
schools" as groups whose members uncritically accept group beliefs, usually that of
the leader. He described the case ofthe operant conditioning school, which has been
based on the group beliefs developed by B.F. Skinner. The group formed a relatively
isolated system with its own set of ideas, own set of criteria for acceptable research
and scientific significance, and little openness to alternatives.
In some groups, changes of group beliefs are accompanied by internal struggle. As
in other types of groups, members of scientists groups may bitterly fight for a
change, form subgroups, and even split from a parent group. A split indicates that
at least two subgroups of scientists did not agree about changing group beliefs, which
could refer to certain theory, methodology, or an essence of a discipline. When such
disagreement is irreconcilable, the subgroup may part and establish a new group.
Among the most known splits in scientific groups are the departures and expUlsions
in the Freudian group of psychoanalysis. The case of lung is probably one of the
most salient (Murphy & Kovach, 1972).
Carl lung, a psychiatrist from Zurich, moved close to the psychoanalytic group
lead by Freud and within short time was considered as one of its members.
Moreover, Freud considered lung as a possible heir to his leadership (Roazen,
1971). It is beyond the scope of this analysis to describe in details the dispute
Postscript
120
Conclusions
The presented analysis of scientists' group beliefs indicates that their study is an
important direction of emphasis in the sociology and philosophy of science. This
focus may contribute not only to the understanding of how groups of scientists
organize themselves and change, but also to how scientific ideas develop. Scientific
ideas often serve as group beliefs and therefore their examination may shed light on
why some ideas persist and others disappear. As a support to what has been just said,
I would like to end this postscript with Kuhn's (1970) last sentences from his now
classic book, The structure of scientific revolutions:
How does one elect and how is one elected to membership in a particular community, scientific or not? What is the process and what are the stages of socialization
to the group? What does the group collectively see as its goals; what deviations,
individual or collective, will it tolerate; and how does it control the impermissible
observation? A fuller understanding of science will depend on answers to other
sorts of questions as well, but there is no area in which more work is so badly
needed. Scientific knowledge, like language, is intrinsically the common property
of a group or else nothing at all. To understand it we shall need to know the special
characteristics of the groups that create and use it. (pp. 209-210)
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132
References
Author Index
Abelson, R.P., 1
Aberle, D.E, 40
Adorno, T.W., 18
Ajzen, I., 13
Allen, V.L., 60, 70
Allen, W.S., 97, 103
Allport, F.H., 109
Allport, G.W., 1,23,33
Almond, G., 112
Altman, I., 2
Antebi, D., 4,17,111
Apter, D.E., 56
Ardener, S., 50
Aronson, E., 1
Asch, E.S., 2, 64, 108
Ash, R., 90
Austin, G.A., 9
Axelrod, R., 13, 108
Back, K.w., 73
Barber, B., 119
Bar-Tal, D., 4, 9,11,17,18,19,58,59,
61, 93, 94, 97, 110, 111
Bar-Tal, Y., 11, 71, 85
Barritt, D.P., 38
Barth, E, 40
Bartlett, F.e., 9
Batchelder, W.H., 44
Bauer, Y., 97
Beaver, D., 116
Bekterev, Y.N., 32-33
Bell, D., 83
134
B.G., 36
Davies, M.E, 2
Davis, A.K., 40
Dawidowicz, L.S., 94, 98
Dawson, P.A., 17
Deconchy, J.P., 44
Deese, J., 44
Deutsch, M., 39
Devos, G., 40
Diamond, M., 51
DiRenzo, GJ., 18
Dollard, J., 103
Dougherty, J.W.D., 36
Downey, G.L., 87,90
Durkheirn, E., 24, 29-30
Duvenger, M., 81
D~ndrade,
Eldersveld, S.J., 81
Emerson, R., 40
Epstein, A.L., 63
Etzioni, A., 53, 88
Farr, R.M., 30, 111
Festinger, L., 69, 70, 73, 74
Feyerabend, P.K., 6
Fishbein, M., 13, 14
Fisher, C.S., 117
Fiske, S.T., 1, 9
Flament, C., 60, 66
Fletcher, G.J., 36
Forgas, J.P., 110
Frenkel-Brunswik, E., 18
Freud, S., 14, 26-27
Galanter, E., 13
Galanter, M., 76
Geertz, C., 112
Gehlen, M.P., 72
George, A.L., 13
Gerard, H.B., 14
Gergen, KJ., 7, 8
Geva, N., 4, 11
Giles, H., 106
Gillin, J., 51
Glaser, H., 98, 99, 103
Golembiewski, R.T., 2, 79
Goodnow, J.J., 9
Gordon, S., 94, 97, 98, 100, 101, 103
Grant, L.V., 17
Author Index
Graumann, CE, 33
Green, T.H., 23
Griffin, R.W., 85
Griffiths, A.P., 5
Gusfield, J.R., 86
Halrnos, P., 116
Hamilton, R., 97
Hare, A.P., 2
Hartmann, D.D., 102, 104
Harvey, 0.J., 69
Heider, E, 43
Higgins, E.T., 9, 17,59
Hintikka, J., 5
Hogg, M.A., 66, 67
Holsti, O.R., 13, 108
Homans, G., 49
Hood, W.R., 69
Horwitz, M., 42, 67, 109
Hostetler, J.A., 49, 50, 58, 84, 89
Indik, B.P., 107
Israel, J., 111
Jackel, E., 100
Jackson, J., 44
James, W., 23
Jaros, D., 17
Jones, E.E., 14
Judd, CH., 24, 27, 28
Jung, CG., 23, 24, 25
Kagan, J., 14
Katz, D., 12, 19
Kaufman, G.D., 8
Kelley, H.H., 77
Kelly, R.M., 44
Kent, v., 2
Kershaw, I., 97
Killian, L.M., 40, 60, 64, 89
King, G., 9,17,59
Klar, Y., 4, 19
Kluckhohn, C., 51
Korten, D.C., 53
Kovach, J.K., 119
Krantz, D.L., 119
Krech, D., 1,9,12,15,18,40,43,
108
135
Author Index
Kruglanski, A.w., 4, 7, 10, 11, 14, 19,71,
110
Kuhn, T.S., 6, 115, 117, 120
Lakatos, I., 6, 119
Lane, R.E., 17, 19,56
Latane, B., 72
LeBon, G., 26
Lehman, E.C., 88
Levine, 1M., 73, 86
LeVine, R.A., 109
Levinson, D.l, 18
Levy, M.l, 40
Levy, S.B., 38, 58, 83
Lewin, K., 1,42,67, 105
Lijphart, A., 81
Lindley, c., 87
Lombardo, M.M., 85
Luckmann, T., 58
Maass, A., 86
Manicas, P.T., 7
Mannheim, K., 8, 112
March, IG., 53
Markus, H., 1,9
Marx, K., 14
McCall, G.G., 49
McCall, M.W., 85
McClelland, D.C., 10
McDougall, W., 1,24,28-29, 109
McGinn, c., 9
McGrath, IE., 2
McGuire, W.J., 1
Mead, G.H., 2
Merton, R.K., 8, 39, 119
Messinger, S.L., 91
Milbrath, L.w., 13
Miller, G.A., 13
Moorhead, G., 85
Moreland, R.L., 65, 86
Moscovici, S., 30-31, 33, 79, 86,111
Mosse, G.L., 94, 96, 97, 98, 99, 103
Mugny, G., 86
Mulkay, M.l, 115
Mullins, N.C., 116, 118
Murphy, G., 119
Musgrave, A., 6, 119
Mussolini, B., 57
Nagata, 1, 83
Neisser, u., 9, 10
Newcomb, T.M., 1,77, 111
Newel, A., 10
Noakes, 1, 95
O'Dea, T.E, 59
Olmsted, M.S., 39
Osgood, D.W., 10
Ostrom, T.M., 65
Parsons, T., 36, 51, 75, 108, 112
Pepitone, A., 111
Peterson, c., 11
Peterson, IH., 39
Plato, 14
Poole, R., 9
Popper, K.R., 6, 7, 11
Power, 1, 68
Prather, IE., 75
Pribram, K.H., 13
Price, D.l, 116
Pridham, G., 95
Pryor, IB., 64
Pulzer, P.G., 98, 99
Rabbie, 1M., 42, 67, 109
Rayner, S., 83, 87
Richards, I, 101, 102
Riecken, H.W., 70
Rigby, T.H., 74
Roazen, P., 119
Roberts, D.A., 38
Rokeach, M., 12, 15, 18,51
Romney, A.K., 44
Rosenberg, M.l, 1
Rothman, G., 12
Russell, B., 8
Ryle,8
Sachdev, I., 66, 67
Salisbury, R.H., 36, 54
Sampson, E.E., 111
Sanford, R.N., 18
Sarnoff, I., 18
Saxe, L., 9
Sayers, S., 8
Schachter, S., 70, 73
Schleunes, K.A., 95
Author Index
136
Scott, W.A., 10
Secord, P.F., 7
Seliktar. 0., 107
Shaw, M.E., 2, 73, 79
Shaw, R., 5
Sher~, M., 2, 59, 64, 67, 69, 70, 73, 108
Sherif, C.W., 69
Shils, E., 56
Shipley, P., 56
Sills, D.L., 53
Simmons, G.L., 49
Simon, H., 10,53, 110
Simpson, G.E., 38, 61
Skivington, K.E., 85
Slater, P.E., 51
Smelser, N.J., 49, 108
Smith, M., 39
Smith, M.B., 18, 19
Solso, R.L., 5
Spencer, H., 23
Srull, T.K., 1, 17
Staub, E., 96
Steiner, 1.0., 109
Steinert M.G., 104
Stent, G.S., 118
Stogdill, R.M., 2, 41
Stotland, E., 64
Stroup,H.H., 67,82
Sutton, F.X., 40
Szalay, L.B., 44
Thifel, H., 39, 42, 43, 48, 60, 64, 65, 66,
67,70, 111
Thnnenbaum, P.H., 1
Thrcie, G., 31-32
Thylor, S.E., 1,9
Thibaut, 1, 69
Thomas, W.I., 31
Thompson, B., 38
Thch, H., 48,56,61,64,68,71
Triandis, H.C., 8
Triska, IF., 57, 74, 76, 84, 85
Truman, D.B., 54
Turner, IC., 39, 42, 66, 67, 106, 111
Turner, R.H., 60, 89
Van Avermaet, E., 86
Vander Zanden, IW., 53, 61
Verba, S., 2, 37,73,79, 112
Warriner, C.K., 75
Weimer, W.B., 6, 7
Weiner, B., 14
Welch, R., 38
Weller, S.C., 44
White, B.I, 69
White, L.A., 24
White, R.W., 18, 19
Whitworth, 1, 52
Wiener, N., 23
Wilde~D.A.,
59,60,66, 70
Wilker, H.R., 13
Williams, R.M., 51, 52
Wilson, J., 89
Wistrich, R., 94, 99
Wolf, S., 72
Wolfe, D., 64
Worchel, S., 88
Wundt, W., 24, 25
Wyer, R.S., 1, 17
larkin-Levin, K., 11
Zajonc, R.B., 1,9
Zald, M.N., 84,90
Zander, A., 2, 40, 41, 53, 64, 73
Zeman, Z.A., 100
Znaniecki, F., 31
Zuckerman, A.S., 82
Subject Index
Accessibility, 9, 17,59,73,77
Adventism, 67
Amalgamated Flying Saucer Club of
America, 48
American Society, 45, 51-52
American Sunbathing Society, 47
Americans for Democratic Action, 54
Amish, 49-50, 58, 84, 89
Ammann, Jacob, 89
Amnesty, 52, 68
Anabaptism, 89
Anti-Apartheid Movement, 56
Anti-Digit Dialing League, 68-69
Anti-Semitism, 95-104
Archetypes, 25
Arnold, Eberhard, 52
Associative Group Analysis, 44
Attitude, 1,2, 14, 18-19,31
Baker, Eric, 68
Belief, 1,2,5-21
common beliefs, 1, 25, 35, 36
group, see group beliefs
group behavior, 108
personal beliefs, 3, 5
shared, 1,2,9,21,23-33,35-36,
39-43, 45, 77, 112
system, 15, 17-18, 19, 107
Black Panthers, 68
Bloom-Cooper, Louis, 68
Bolshevik Revolution, 37
Brethren, 89
British Measure Group, 56
Bruderhof, 52
Categorization, 8, 10, 65
Categorization of self, 42-43, 60, 65,
106
Catholic Church, 44
Centrality of beliefs, 16-17,58-59,73,
74-75,106
Choctaw Indians, 38
Christian Democratic Party in Italy, 82
Clamshell Alliance, 87, 90
Cluster, 118
Coalition for Direct Action, 87, 90
Cognition, 5, 10, 12
social, 1, 110-112
Cognitive map, 13
Cognitive organization, 10
Collective mind, 26
Collective reflexology, 32
Collective representation, 23, 24, 29-31
Collective unconscious, 23, 24-25
Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy,
80-81
Communication network, 118
Communism, 38, 57
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 57,
72, 74, 75-76, 84-85
Confidence in beliefs, 16, 57-58
Conservative Caucus (T.C.C.), 54-55
Consumer Federation of America, 56
Content analysis, 45
Contents of knowledge (beliefs), 10-11,
12, 36
Subject Index
138
Coordinated activity, 42-43
Correlative activity, 32
Crystal Night, 95
Decision making, 107-108
Definition of the situation, 31
Delegitimization
definition, 93
of Jews in Germany, 95-104
ways of, 93-94
Der Sturmer, 101
Disciplinary matrix, 117
Disintegration, 90
Doukhobors, 50
Dutch society, 81
Ernic approach, 40
Epistemic authority, 71
Epistemic freezing, 11
Epistemic process, 11
Epistemic unfreezing, 11
Epistemology, 6
Ethnic group, 40, 41, 63-64, 77
Evangelical Lutheran Church, 79
Fascism, 56-57
Folk soul, 25-26
Freud, S., 119-120
Freudian group, 119-120
Functionality,'18-20, 59-61, 70-71,
102-104
Garvey, Marcus, 38
Gestalt, 10, 29, 43, 64
Goal, 1, 2, 12, 53-56
interdependence, 39
Gorbachev, Mikhail, 85
Group, 1,2,36,37,41,109-110
behavior, 1,2,31, 108-109
boundaries, 2, 59-60, 106, 117
climate, 84
dohesiveness, 74, 75, 107
definition, 27, 39-43
foundation, 64-69, 105-106
membership, 75-77
pressure, 73
scientists, 115-120
structure, 2, 106-107
types, 51
Group beliefs, 2, 3, 35
change, 83-86, 118-119
characteristics, 57-61
contents, 47-57
definition, 36-38
of delegitimization, 93-104
dissemination, 72-73
formation, 63-73, 117
fundamental, 37,48,60,63-69, 106,
117
and group behavior, 31, 108-169
and group definition, 39-43
and group disintegration, 90-91
and group foundation, 105-106, 117
and group members reality, 106
and group mergence, 79-81
and group structure, 74-75, 106-107
identification, 43-45
and influence, 107-108
and intergroup relations, 108
maintenance, 73-75
multiple, 77
and schism, 86-90
of scientists, 116-120
and subgrouping, 81-83, 107
Group mind, 1,23, 24, 28-29
Group psychology, 26-27
Gunther, Hans, 99, 101
Hicksites, 89
Hitler, 95, 97, 100
Holocaust, 96
Hypnotic state, 26, 27
Identification, 27
Identification function, 59-60
Ideology, 12, 56-57, 83
Individual differences, 9, 110
Individualism, 111
Informative function, 60-61
Interdependence, 42
Interest group, 54-56, 81
Intergroup relations, 108
International Psychoanalytic Association,
120
139
Subject Index
International Society of Political Psychology, 116
Japan, 37
Jean Piaget Society, 1, 6
Jehovah's Witness, 67, 82
Jews in Germany, 95-104
John Birch Society, 38
Jung, Carl, 119-120
Ku Klux Klan, 52-53, 61
Knowledge, 5-21, 65, 110
Kolping, Adolph, 53
Kolping Society, 53-54
Labor Party in Great Britain, 87
Labor Party in Israel, 82
Leaders, 107-108
Liberal Party in Great Britain, 79
Libido, 27, 120
Lubovitcher Hasidim, 38, 58, 83
Malayan identity, 83-84
Mein Kampf, 100
Mergence, 79-81
Methodism, 89
Mexican Revolution, 37
Minimal group situation, 60, 66-67
Minority influence, 86
Mormons, 59
Motivation, 14
Nations, 40, 41, 77
National Black Sisters' Conference, 77
National Rifle Association, 56
National Right to Life Committee, 56
Nazism, 95-104
Needs, 18-20,42, 59-61, 65, 75, 102-104
Nonjustificational approach, 6-10
Norm, 2, 12,30,40,44,49-51
Northern Ireland, 37-38
Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign, 80-81
Operant conditioning school, 119
Operational code, 13
Order of the Sons of Italy in America, 76
Organization, 40, 41, 77
10-11
Protestant Episcopal Church, 89
Protestant Methodist Church, 89
Protocols of the Elders of Zion, 100, 101
Quakers, 89
Ras Tafari Movement, 38, 61
Redhouse, Diana, 68
Relativism, 8
Richard ill Society, 54
Robber Cave experiment, 69-70
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds,
56
Russell, Charles Taze, 67
Rutherford, Joseph Franklin, 67
Saliency, 71
Schema, 10
Science, 119
Scientific groups, 115-116
Scientific schools, 119
Scientists, 115-120
Schism, 86-90
Self-categorization theory, 66-67
Skinner, B.F., 119
Social categorization, 65, 66, 67
Social Consciousness, 27-28
Social Democratic Party in Great Britain,
79,87
Social Group, 31-32
Social identity theory, 65, 66
Social impact theory, 72
Social movement, 40
Social representation, 30-31
Socialist Worker's Party in Great Britain,
87
Society, 40
Society of Vietnamese Rangers, 77
Specialty, 118
140
Subgrouping, 81-83,.107
Symbolic communication, 106
Townsend National Recovery Plan Organization,91
Trans-Species Unlimited, 53
Unfulfilled prophecy, 70
Unification Church, 76
Subject Index
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 56
Value, 1,2, 12,31,40,51-53
Volkish School, 98-99
Von Leers, Johann, 101
Woman's Christian Temperance Union,
85-86
Worker's League in Great Britain, 88