
Photo Credit: Mohammad Mardani
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: The Two Faces of Extremism
The Core Concept: Human readiness for intergroup violence is not a unified mindset, but is rather driven by two fundamentally distinct psychological motivations: defensive extremism and offensive extremism.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Defensive extremism is motivated by a desire to protect an in-group from perceived external threats and is broadly considered more morally acceptable by the general public. Conversely, offensive extremism is driven by a desire to conquer, exert power, and establish group dominance, and is directly linked to severe macrolevel societal dysfunction.
Origin/History: This dichotomy was established in a large-scale 2026 study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Led by Professor Jonas R. Kunst and involving researchers from Flinders University, the preregistered study analyzed data from 18,128 participants across 58 countries.
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