Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Dentith, M R. X.
2018.
Expertise and Conspiracy Theories.
Social Epistemology,
Vol. 32,
Issue. 3,
p.
196.
Dentith, M R. X.
2019.
Conspiracy theories on the basis of the evidence.
Synthese,
Vol. 196,
Issue. 6,
p.
2243.
Szebeni, Zea
Lönnqvist, Jan-Erik
and
Jasinskaja-Lahti, Inga
2021.
Social Psychological Predictors of Belief in Fake News in the Run-Up to the 2019 Hungarian Elections: The Importance of Conspiracy Mentality Supports the Notion of Ideological Symmetry in Fake News Belief.
Frontiers in Psychology,
Vol. 12,
Issue. ,
Ejaz, Waqas
Ittefaq, Muhammad
Seo, Hyunjin
and
Naz, Farah
2021.
Factors associated with the belief in COVID-19 related conspiracy theories in Pakistan.
Health, Risk & Society,
Vol. 23,
Issue. 3-4,
p.
162.
Moffitt, J. D.
King, Catherine
and
Carley, Kathleen M.
2021.
Hunting Conspiracy Theories During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Social Media + Society,
Vol. 7,
Issue. 3,
Hattersley, Michael
Brown, Gordon D.A.
Michael, John
and
Ludvig, Elliot A.
2022.
Of tinfoil hats and thinking caps: Reasoning is more strongly related to implausible than plausible conspiracy beliefs.
Cognition,
Vol. 218,
Issue. ,
p.
104956.
Cortina, Jeronimo
and
Rottinghaus, Brandon
2022.
Conspiratorial thinking in the Latino community on the 2020 election.
Research & Politics,
Vol. 9,
Issue. 1,
Kim, Jarim
Baek, Jinha
Lee, Jiyeon
and
Kim, Jaeyeon
2022.
How War-Framing Effects Differ Depending on Publics’ Conspiracy Levels: Communicating the COVID-19 Vaccination.
American Behavioral Scientist,
p.
000276422211182.
Dentith, M R. X.
2022.
Suspicious conspiracy theories.
Synthese,
Vol. 200,
Issue. 3,
Mohammed, Dima
and
Rossi, Maria Grazia
2022.
The Pandemic of Argumentation.
Vol. 43,
Issue. ,
p.
125.
Duetz, J. C. M.
2023.
What Does It Mean for a Conspiracy Theory to Be a ‘Theory’?.
Social Epistemology,
Vol. 37,
Issue. 4,
p.
438.
Fotakis, Emmanouil Alexandros
and
Simou, Effie
2023.
Belief in COVID-19 related conspiracy theories around the globe: A systematic review.
Health Policy,
Vol. 137,
Issue. ,
p.
104903.
Dentith, M R. X.
2023.
The Future of the Philosophy of Conspiracy Theory: An Introduction to the Special Issue on Conspiracy Theory Theory.
Social Epistemology,
Vol. 37,
Issue. 4,
p.
405.
Clarke, Steve
2023.
Is There a New Conspiracism?.
Social Epistemology,
Vol. 37,
Issue. 1,
p.
127.
Nejat, Pegah
Heirani-Tabas, Ali
and
Nazarpour, Mohammad Mahdi
2023.
Moral foundations are better predictors of belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories than the Big Five personality traits.
Frontiers in Psychology,
Vol. 14,
Issue. ,
Watson, Scott D
2023.
Conspiracy Theories and Human Trafficking: Coercive Power, Normative Ambiguity and Epistemic Uncertainty.
Journal of Human Trafficking,
p.
1.
Stall, Lindsay M.
and
Petrocelli, John V.
2023.
Countering conspiracy theory beliefs: Understanding the conjunction fallacy and considering disconfirming evidence.
Applied Cognitive Psychology,
Vol. 37,
Issue. 2,
p.
266.
Peels, Rik
Kindermann, Nora
and
Ranalli, Chris
2023.
Normativity in studying conspiracy theory belief: Seven guidelines.
Philosophical Psychology,
Vol. 36,
Issue. 6,
p.
1125.
Stamatiadis-Bréhier, Alexios
2023.
Genealogical undermining for conspiracy theories.
Inquiry,
p.
1.
Morin, David
Bédard, Sylvain
Carignan, Marie-Ève
and
Daxhelet, Marie-Laure
2024.
L’adhésion à la pensée conspirationniste dans le contexte de la pandémie de COVID‑19 au Québec.
Politique et Sociétés,
Vol. 43,
Issue. 3,
p.
13.