Open Peer Commentary
Group myths can create shared understanding even if they don't act as superstimuli
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- 02 January 2025, e181
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The social identity approach offers a more parsimonious and complete explanation of historical myths’ function and characteristics
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- 02 January 2025, e182
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Past glories feel good but creative minorities push us forward
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- 02 January 2025, e183
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Mythos in the light of evolution
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- 02 January 2025, e184
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Myth as model: Group-level interpretive frameworks
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- 02 January 2025, e185
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The influence of stories including myths of origin
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- 02 January 2025, e186
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The Trojan horse of historical myths: Emotion-driven narratives as a strategy for coalitional recruitment
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- 02 January 2025, e187
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Homo historicus: History as psychological science
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- 02 January 2025, e188
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A terror management theory perspective on the appeal of historical myths
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- 02 January 2025, e189
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Myths and prestige in Hindu nationalist politics
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- 02 January 2025, e190
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Historical myths are believed because audiences are socially motivated
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- 02 January 2025, e191
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Why some coalitions benefit from historical myths more than others
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- 02 January 2025, e192
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Historical myths promote cooperation through affective states
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- 02 January 2025, e193
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Limited evidence that fitness interdependence produces historical origin myths
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- 02 January 2025, e194
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The social cognitive evolution of myths: Collective narratives of shared pasts as markers for coalitions' communicative and cooperative prowess
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- 02 January 2025, e195
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Historical myths define group boundaries: A mathematical sketch and evidence from Ukraine
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- 02 January 2025, e196
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Authors' Response
Coalitional psychology and the evolution of nationalistic cultures
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- 02 January 2025, e197
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