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| Crowd of Trump extremists on the United States Capitol Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0) |
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Extremism
The Core Concept: Extremism is a complex, multi-dimensional psychosocial adaptation in which individuals abandon consensual social reality and moderate perspectives in favor of the absolute certainty of the extreme edge, typically in response to overwhelming psychological distress, systemic alienation, or geopolitical terror.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike normative political partisanship, extremism functions as a highly structured psychological defense mechanism for managing deep uncertainty. It operates by exploiting cognitive rigidity and a profound need for cognitive closure, offering hyper-simplified binary frameworks (e.g., "us versus them") that satiate psychological distress through ideological absolutism and the expression of dark personality traits.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Need for Cognitive Closure (NCC) & Cognitive Rigidity: An overwhelming psychological motivation to avoid ambiguity, driving vulnerable populations toward rigid, unambiguous belief systems.
- The Dark Tetrad: The intersection of Machiavellianism, collective narcissism, psychopathy, and everyday sadism, which heavily dictate the authoritarian, coercive, and violent manifestations of extremist adherence.
- Significance Quest Theory: The existential drive for social recognition and meaning, wherein radical organizations exploit a traumatic loss of personal significance by offering heroic status and absolute belonging.
- Terror Management Theory (TMT) & Mortality Salience: The concept that unconscious, unresolved existential dread and fear of global conflict act as macro-environmental accelerants for radicalization.
- Reciprocal Absolutism: The self-sustaining cycle where reactionary state violence and uncompromising rhetoric inadvertently validate the extremist narrative of persecution and existential threat.
- Branch of Science: Social Psychology, Evolutionary Biology, Sociology, Theology, and Geopolitical Analysis.


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