New Haven, the early 1990s. Graduate students in the humanities and social sciences earn stipends that qualify them for food assistance while they teach the discussion sections that keep Yale College running. A union drive is on. Organizers work the libraries and the coffee lines. One of them is a psychology student named John Jost (b. 1968), and he keeps hitting the same wall. The students he approaches are the losers in the arrangement. They know it. Many of them say so. And still they hesitate. Some fear retaliation. Some identify with the professors above them and the institution around them. Some explain that the low pay must serve some purpose, that this is how apprenticeship works, that the system, whatever its faults, is basically sound.
Jost lost the argument more often than he won it. Most organizers file that experience under frustration. He filed it under data. If people will defend an arrangement that pays them poverty wages, and defend it to the face of someone offering a way out, then something is at work that theories of self-interest cannot reach. He spent the next thirty years naming it, measuring it, and defending the name against people who think it explains too much.
The name is system justification, and it made Jost the most cited and most contested political psychologist of his generation. As of 2026 he is Professor of Psychology and Politics at New York University, with affiliations in sociology and data science, director of the Social Justice Lab, co-director of NYU's Center for Social and Political Behavior, editor of Oxford University Press's political psychology series, and founding chief editor of Frontiers in Social Psychology. The honors run long: three Gordon Allport Intergroup Relations Prizes, the Kurt Lewin Award, honorary doctorates in Buenos Aires and Budapest, the presidency of the International Society of Political Psychology. The controversy runs just as long, because Jost has spent his career arguing two claims that many colleagues accept only one at a time: that people of every station are psychologically drawn to legitimate the order they live under, and that the political right and left are not mirror images of each other.
He came to the first claim through his childhood.
Jost was born in Toronto in 1968 while his father, Lawrence Jost, finished a philosophy degree at the University of Toronto. The family came from Rochester, New York, and settled in Cincinnati, where Lawrence taught ancient Greek philosophy at the University of Cincinnati and also taught Karl Marx (1818-1883). Jost's mother, Jean Effinger Jost, earned a doctorate in English and taught medieval literature at Bradley University. The house held Aristotle, Chaucer, and Capital. Jost has said the Nixon administration kept a file on his father because of the Marx courses. No documents have surfaced to confirm this, so it stands as family memory rather than established record, but the belief itself shaped the boy. He grew up in a liberal enclave inside a conservative city, aware early that institutions decide which ideas count as dangerous.
He attended Walnut Hills High School, Cincinnati's selective classical public school, the kind of place where the smart children of professors compete with the smart children of everyone else. By thirteen or fourteen he had decided on psychology. The first motive was clinical and close to home: a relative suffered from serious mental illness, and Jost wanted the tools to help. In college the ambition rotated ninety degrees. Fitting broken people back into intact institutions began to seem like half the problem. What if the institutions were doing some of the breaking? That rotation, from repairing the person to interrogating the system, became the axis of everything he later wrote.
He finished Duke in three years, Phi Beta Kappa, magna cum laude, with a thesis on group polarization. A summer in London in 1988 introduced him to European social psychology and social identity theory, the British tradition that treats group membership as the engine of social perception. Then he did something unusual for an ambitious young psychologist. Admitted to Yale University's doctoral program, he deferred and spent two years studying philosophy at the University of Cincinnati as a Charles Phelps Taft Fellow, writing a master's thesis on Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889-1951) and the acquisition of mental-state concepts.
The detour explains the vocabulary. Most experimental psychologists use words like ideology, legitimacy, and false consciousness the way tourists use a phrasebook. Jost inherited them from the traditions that coined them: Marx, Max Weber (1864-1920), Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937), Karl Mannheim (1893-1947), the Frankfurt School, and behind them all Étienne de La Boétie (1530-1563), the sixteenth-century Frenchman who asked why millions obey one man who could not compel a hundred of them. The question of voluntary servitude is five centuries old. Jost's bet was that it could be dragged into the laboratory without dying on the table.
At Yale, beginning in 1990, he found the collaborator who made the bet possible. Mahzarin Banaji (b. 1956) was then building, with Anthony Greenwald, the research program on implicit social cognition that later produced the Implicit Association Test. The core finding was that people carry associations they do not endorse. A subject can sincerely reject racial hierarchy on a questionnaire and still show automatic preferences that track it. For a student steeped in Gramsci, the implication was electric: if attitudes live below the level of avowal, then ideology can too, and the study of political consciousness can no longer stop at what people say they believe.
Jost also absorbed William J. McGuire (1925-2007), his dissertation adviser, who preached what he called perspectivism: every theory is right about something, and the researcher's job is to find the conditions under which each holds, rather than to stage a tournament with one permanent winner. Leonard Doob (1909-2000) and Robert Abelson (1928-2005) rounded out the training. The formation shows in Jost's mature style, which absorbs rival theories rather than demolishing them.
The founding document came out of a seminar paper. In a course on stereotyping and prejudice, Jost argued that stereotypes do more than simplify the world or flatter the groups that hold them. They explain hierarchy. They convert an arrangement of power into a story about traits. Banaji saw what the paper was and pushed it toward publication. "The Role of Stereotyping in System-Justification and the Production of False Consciousness" appeared in the British Journal of Social Psychology in 1994. Jost was twenty-five.
The paper opened with an inventory of anomalies. The reigning theories held that people justify themselves (ego justification) and their groups (group justification). Yet the literature was full of disadvantaged people doing neither: accepting unflattering stereotypes of their own kind, preferring higher-status outgroups, asking less pay for the same work, blessing the arrangements that held them down. Jost and Banaji proposed a third motive. People want to see the overarching system as fair, legitimate, and necessary, and this want can operate against their personal and group interests. They gave the old Marxist term false consciousness an operational afterlife: consciousness that serves the system at the expense of the self.
The theory, as it developed over the next three decades, rests on a simple account of why the motive exists. Legitimacy pays, psychologically, in three currencies. It pays in certainty: a justified world is a predictable world, and institutions supply the categories through which life makes sense. It pays in safety: a legitimate order feels less dangerous than an arbitrary or collapsing one. And it pays in belonging: to reject the arrangements everyone around you accepts is to risk losing shared reality with your family, your congregation, your workplace. Epistemic, existential, relational. When those needs run high, through threat, dependence, or the absence of any credible alternative, the defense of the status quo runs high with them.
Read that way, system justification is an accommodation to dependence rather than a failure of intelligence. A man can see that the company treats him badly and still need the job, distrust the union, fear the disruption, and doubt that anything better exists. The theory's claim is that on top of these calculations sits a motivated push to go further, to conclude that the arrangement is fair, so that the dependence stops hurting.
The most elegant demonstrations involve stereotypes that flatter both sides of a hierarchy. With Aaron Kay, Jost showed that exposing people to the figure of the poor-but-happy or poor-but-honest man increased their belief that society is just. Every rank gets a compensating virtue. The rich are competent but cold; the poor are warm but unsuccessful; men command but cannot feel; women feel but cannot command. The ledger balances and the hierarchy stands. The same logic runs through benevolent sexism, the affectionate register that praises women as pure, delicate, and deserving of protection, and thereby writes them out of authority. The compliment does the work of the insult. Jost's studies of depressed entitlement extended the point to wages: members of lower-status groups can come to regard less as their due, so the discrimination completes itself from the inside.
Then there are the system-threat experiments. Tell participants their country is declining, their economy failing, their social order under attack, and watch what happens. The naive prediction says criticism erodes allegiance. Often the opposite occurs: threat activates defense, and people cling harder to the arrangement under indictment, reaching for the stereotypes that justify it. The effect is conditional, and Jost is careful about the conditions. People do revolt, emigrate, and withdraw legitimacy, especially when an alternative looks viable. But the finding explains a pattern every failed reformer knows: the exposé that was supposed to shatter faith in the institution somehow deepened it. A movement that offers only demolition strengthens the walls. Durable change needs an offer of continuity, safety, and belonging to compete with the ones the old order already makes.
Jost took the theory to the University of Maryland after his 1995 doctorate, where Arie Kruglanski (b. 1939) supplied the motivational machinery. Kruglanski's need for cognitive closure, the hunger for a firm answer and an end to ambiguity, gave Jost a measurable variable connecting personality to politics. Then came a move rich in irony: in 1997 the man theorizing why workers accept their wages joined the faculty of the Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Picture the seminar room. Future consultants and venture capitalists, the least falsely conscious people in America, taking a required course in organizational behavior from a scholar of false consciousness. Jost taught negotiation, teamwork, and social influence, and he watched hierarchy in its natural habitat. A corporation is a legitimacy engine: salaries, titles, promotion tracks, and an official ideology of merit, all consumed daily by people who depend on it. He has said the business school taught him how legitimation looks from above. With Brenda Major he convened the interdisciplinary project that became The Psychology of Legitimacy (2001), built on the premise that durable power runs on consent, coercion being too expensive to hold anything together for long.
The move to NYU in 2003, after a fellowship year at Harvard's Radcliffe Institute, gave Jost a chance to run his theory on himself, and he took it. Staying at Stanford required nothing. Leaving meant risk, disruption, a family move across the country. He has described consciously correcting for the inertia that favors the existing arrangement, in his life as in his subjects'. He and the clinical psychologist Orsolya Hunyady, Hungarian-born, whom he married in 2001, moved to New York with what became a family of four. The Hungarian connection later deepened into a scholarly one, with collaborations at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, which gave him an honorary doctorate in 2021. With Hunyady he developed the concept that may be the theory's emotional center: the palliative function of ideology. Believing the world is fair feels good. It quiets anger, guilt, and dread. For the winner it aligns success with justice. For the loser it trades long-term interest for short-term peace. Ideology, on this account, is a drug the society administers to itself, and like most drugs it works.
By then Jost had detonated his second bomb. "Political Conservatism as Motivated Social Cognition," written with Jack Glaser, Kruglanski, and Frank Sulloway (b. 1947), appeared in Psychological Bulletin in 2003. The paper synthesized decades of research into a claim of elective affinity: needs for certainty, order, and threat management make the ideas of the right, tradition, hierarchy, authority, the sanctity of the existing, more psychologically attractive to the people who have those needs in higher degree. Two dimensions define conservatism in the model, resistance to change and acceptance of inequality, and they can come apart: the religious traditionalist who wants redistribution, the libertarian who welcomes disruption and shrugs at the Gini coefficient.
The press coverage flattened the argument into "scientists say conservatives are scared and rigid," and the reaction was loud. Columnists mocked the study, a Guardian headline announced that a study of Bush's psyche had touched a nerve, and members of Congress questioned the federal grants behind it. Critics inside the discipline raised the serious version of the objection: if you define conservatism as attachment to hierarchy and resistance to change, and then find that it correlates with need for order, you may have discovered your own definitions. And what of the left's rigidities, the Stalinists and the campus enforcers? Jost's standing answer became the fulcrum of the rest of his career: rigidity on both sides is possible; symmetry is an empirical question; and a science that assumes the answer before looking is doing etiquette rather than research.
The question came to a head in a hotel ballroom in San Antonio in January 2011. Jonathan Haidt (b. 1963), addressing roughly a thousand colleagues at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, asked for a show of hands. Liberals? A forest of arms, the great majority of the room. Centrists and libertarians? A few dozen. Conservatives? Three hands. Haidt called the field a tribal moral community, argued that its politics distorted its science, and proposed affirmative action for conservative scholars. The room laughed at the jokes and shifted in its seats at the rest, and the New York Times gave the talk a column. From where Jost sat, the diagnosis had the causation backward. A scientist's demographic identity does not determine the truth of a finding; methods do. Testable hypotheses, defensible measures, transparent analysis, replication: these are the discipline's immune system, and they work, when they work, regardless of who votes for whom. Ideological diversity might catch some errors, he allowed, but treating the researcher's politics as the measure of the research is itself a corruption of standards. Neither man has moved much in fifteen years, and the argument has never been settled, because both premises are true: values do steer questions, and methods do check answers, and the ratio between the two varies from study to study.
Meanwhile the theory kept colonizing new territory. With Irina Feygina and Rachel Goldsmith, Jost showed that system-justifying attitudes predict denial and minimization of environmental problems. The finding reframes climate denial as system defense: the diagnosis indicts the industrial economy and the way of life built on it, so rejecting the diagnosis protects the legitimacy of both. The same studies located the workaround. When environmental action was framed as patriotic, as protecting the American way of life, as system-sanctioned change, resistance softened. Reform sells as fulfillment; it stalls as repudiation. Jost later joined the international megastudies testing climate messages across dozens of countries, part of the field's post-replication-crisis turn toward large samples, preregistration, and head-to-head comparison of interventions. A 2024 megastudy in Science, with over 32,000 participants and 25 treatments, found that partisan animosity can be reduced, though a treatment that warms feelings toward the other side does not automatically strengthen commitment to democratic rules. The two problems are related and separate.
The work on collective action closed the circle that opened in New Haven. System justification, across many studies, predicts reduced moral outrage, and outrage is the fuel of protest. Before people act, they must judge their condition illegitimate, assign a cause, imagine an alternative, believe action can succeed, and find others who see the same reality. The theory maps the threshold a movement must cross, and explains why the phrase "voting against their interests" explains so little. Interests are plural. People vote to protect their families, their churches, their standing, their sense of order, and their picture of the world, and the material interest competes with the rest.
There were excursions into the brain. With David Amodio, Jost examined neurocognitive correlates of ideology, conflict monitoring, and responses to novelty; other studies linked political attitudes to brain structure. The press loved the liberal brain and the conservative brain. Jost's own position is more modest: neural correlates prove nothing about innateness, brains develop through experience, some of the early studies were small, and the theory stands or falls on behavioral evidence, with neuroscience as one added level of description. There was also the computational turn. At NYU his lab moved into social media at scale, and one prominent finding entered the general vocabulary: moral-emotional language accelerates the spread of political messages within ideological networks. Outrage travels. Digital platforms turn out to be legitimacy machines too, sites where shared reality is built, allies identified, boundaries policed, and institutions blessed or damned, at a volume of millions of posts rather than dozens of undergraduates.
The synthesis arrived in 2020. A Theory of System Justification, from Harvard University Press, gathered twenty-five years of evidence and set the theory in the lineage of La Boétie: no order survives on coercion alone; it survives because enough of its inhabitants reproduce it in thought. The book also concedes the theory's hardest internal problem. Modern societies are systems of systems. A man can defend the nation and despise the government, defend capitalism and hate the corporations, defend democracy and reject an election. Which system is being justified, by whom, and when, is a question the theory must answer case by case, and its critics doubt it always can. The following year came Left and Right: The Psychological Significance of a Political Distinction, which defended the old spectrum against the recurring announcement of its death. Movements scramble positions, Jost concedes, but the underlying conflict persists: equality against hierarchy, change against preservation. The book won the International Society of Political Psychology's outstanding book award in 2022.
The criticisms deserve their own accounting, because they are serious and Jost has had to live with them. The sharpest comes from the social identity tradition he trained beside. Chuma Owuamalam, Mark Rubin, Russell Spears, and Luca Caricati argue that no separate system-justifying motive is needed. A poor man who defends the nation may identify with the nation, a group like any other, just larger. He may expect to rise. He may judge, reasonably, that the alternatives on offer are worse. If identity and hope and prudence explain the data, the extra motive is furniture. Beneath this runs the falsifiability worry: a theory that can read both submission and rebellion as consistent with itself explains everything and therefore nothing. Jost's defense is that the theory makes conditional predictions, defense rising with threat, dependence, and inescapability, falling when alternatives appear, and that these have held across methods and countries. A second wound was partly self-inflicted. Early formulations of the status-legitimacy hypothesis suggested the disadvantaged might justify the system most strongly. The evidence usually shows the opposite, since the privileged have better reasons to call the game fair. Jost's mature position asks for less: some disadvantaged people defend the system despite the cost to self and group, those cases are real, and they need explaining. True, and less dramatic than the theory's reputation. Add the field-wide problems, student samples, self-report, scales that may overlap with the outcomes they predict, contested implicit measures, and the fair summary is that the theory's strength lies in convergence. No single study carries it. The accumulated weight, across surveys, experiments, representative samples, and thirty years, does.
The last decade has made Jost's politics harder to bracket, because he stopped bracketing them. In 2024, with Débora de Oliveira Santos, he published a nationally representative survey of 1,557 American adults in Communications Psychology. Conservatives expressed less support for political equality and legal guarantees and more willingness to defect from democratic rules and vote for anti-democratic candidates, differences partly mediated by right-wing authoritarianism and social dominance orientation. The study contained a twist that complicates any cartoon of the author: political system justification, on which conservatives scored higher, predicted support for free speech and cut against anti-democratic tendencies. Defending an existing system protects its rules, and when the system is a liberal democracy, the conservative reflex conserves it. System justification is an engine without a fixed destination; what it defends depends on what stands.
The same year he delivered his Kurt Lewin Award address and published it as "Both-Sideology Endangers Democracy and Social Science" in the Journal of Social Issues, sixty-five pages of the least hedged prose of his career. The reflex that treats left and right as equally prejudiced, equally violent, equally lax about democratic norms is, he argued, false on the evidence and dangerous in effect, a professional politeness that blinds the discipline to a historically particular threat. He invoked Kurt Lewin (1890-1947), the refugee from Nazi Germany who founded the field's engaged tradition and rejected moral relativism, and claimed that legacy for the present. The address states the evidence for asymmetry; it also raises the stakes of being wrong. A scholar who names one political tendency as the greater danger has narrowed the distance between analysis and advocacy to a line, and his critics, some of whom accuse him of embodying the politicized science Haidt warned about, patrol that line without rest. Jost's answer has not changed: symmetry is a finding, not an assumption, and pretending the evidence is evenly distributed is its own form of bias.
In February 2026 came a paper that returned him, after forty years, to the relative whose illness first drew him to psychology. With Jussi Valtonen and Flávio Azevedo, in American Psychologist, he reported three studies, including a nationally representative sample, showing that economic system justification was the strongest and most consistent predictor of mental illness stigma, and that mentally ill characters were stigmatized more when depicted as poor. The logic completes itself. If the economy is fair, outcomes reflect character, and the man who cannot function is not sick or unlucky. He has failed, and failure invites blame rather than care. The stigma that public campaigns cannot dent turns out to be load-bearing: it holds up a picture of the economy. The boy who wanted to help one suffering relative ended by arguing that the suffering was, in part, an output of the story his country tells about success.
What does the whole career amount to? Strip the apparatus and the claim is old and strong. Domination is a problem of meaning before it is a problem of force. An order survives when its outcomes seem deserved, its categories seem natural, and its alternatives seem worse, and human beings, needing certainty, safety, and company in their beliefs, are recruited into supplying that seeming, sometimes against themselves. Jost's achievement was to take this from the philosophers who asserted it and give it hypotheses, measures, boundary conditions, and a body count of studies. The theory's weakness, its elasticity across the many systems a modern person inhabits, is the shadow of its scope, and his recent work, tying defense to particular systems in particular moments, is the repair in progress.
The practical lesson runs in both directions across the political spectrum, which may be why readers of every persuasion find something usable in it. To the reformer it says: your exposé is not enough, and may backfire; offer continuity, belonging, and a future that feels safer than the present, or lose to an unjust order that offers all three. To the conservative it says: the loyalty you feel toward inherited arrangements is a human need meeting a human institution, and the same loyalty, in a decent system, is what holds the constitutional floor when partisans start prying at the boards. And to everyone it says that the feeling of living in a fair world is a product, manufactured daily, purchased with attention and repetition, and worth auditing from time to time against the world itself. The graduate students in New Haven who would not sign the card were not fools. They were paying for certainty, safety, and company in the only currency they had. The whole career is a receipt.
Notes
The 2024 Santos study is in Communications Psychology (N=1,557, published July 2, 2024). “Both-Sideology Endangers Democracy and Social Science” is Journal of Social Issues 80(3), pp. 1138-1203, and it was his Kurt Lewin Award address, hence “sixty-five pages.” The mental illness stigma paper, Valtonen, Azevedo, Jost, three studies, total N=1,514, poor characters stigmatized more, appeared in American Psychologist, February 2026. The 2024 Science megastudy had 32,059 participants and 25 treatments.
Scenes and what supports them. The San Antonio scene is the best documented: Haidt‘s SPSP talk, January 2011, roughly a thousand attendees, three conservative hands, covered by John Tierney in the NYT, “Social Scientist Sees Bias Within,” February 7, 2011. The hand counts and “tribal moral community” phrase are from that coverage and Haidt’s published talk; the room’s reactions, laughter, shifting in seats, are my extrapolation. The New Haven opening scene rests on Jost‘s own accounts that his interest partly came from a failed effort to organize graduate students at Yale; the food-assistance detail and specific organizing encounters are extrapolation from the documented conditions of the GESO drives of that era. The Guardian headline on the 2003 flap is real: “Study of Bush’s psyche touches a nerve,” August 13, 2003. Congressional criticism of the NSF/NIH grants behind the 2003 paper is documented; Reps. Sam Johnson and others raised it publicly.
Extrapolations without links, flagged. The Stanford seminar-room scene, MBA students, required organizational behavior course, extrapolates from his documented GSB appointment and teaching areas. “The house held Aristotle, Chaucer, and Capital” compresses his parents’ documented specialties..
Google Scholar shows him well past 150,000 citations.
I did not invent dialogue. The Haidt scene carries the dialogue function through the hand-count. See Tierney’s piece and Jost’s SPSP blog response, “Debunking Both-Sideology for the Sake of Democracy and Social Science”.
Jost and Mannheim’s Paradox
In April 1933 the new German government dismissed Karl Mannheim from his chair in sociology at Frankfurt. He had held it for three years. He was Hungarian, Jewish, and the author of Ideology and Utopia (1929), the book that argued all political thought is bound to the social position of the thinker. The regime that expelled him did not read him. It did not need to. It confirmed him. A movement built on total ideology, on the claim that truth itself is racial and positional, drove out the man who had diagnosed positional thinking, and it drove him out for his position. He went to the London School of Economics and spent the rest of his life, until his death in 1947, trying to answer the question his own book had made unavoidable: if all social thought is situated, on what ground does the diagnostician stand?
That question is the deep structure of John Jost's career, and Jost knows it. His vocabulary is Mannheim's inheritance. Ideology, legitimation, false consciousness, the social determination of belief: these terms passed from Marx through Mannheim's generation into the sociology of knowledge, and from there, through Jost's two years of philosophy in Cincinnati and his seminar papers at Yale, into the psychology laboratory. System justification theory is what Mannheim's central concept looks like after it has been converted into scales, manipulations, and nationally representative samples. And Jost's late career, the asymmetry research and the both-sideology polemic above all, is a sustained attempt to answer Mannheim's paradox: to show that a science of ideology can be conducted by an ideological animal without collapsing into one more ideology. Whether the attempt succeeds is the question this essay tries to hold open long enough to examine.
Begin with what Mannheim claimed. He distinguished two conceptions of ideology. The particular conception is the everyday accusation: my opponent lies, shades, and rationalizes because it pays him to. This conception leaves the accuser's own thought untouched. The total conception goes further: my opponent's entire mode of thought, his categories, his sense of what counts as evidence, his picture of the world, arises from his social location. Marxism wielded the total conception against the bourgeoisie while exempting the proletariat and its theorists. Mannheim took the step Marxism refused. He generalized the total conception. Turn it on everyone, including yourself. Once you do, no political thought escapes situation. The conservative's traditionalism, the liberal's proceduralism, the socialist's theory of history, and the sociologist's theory of all of the above are each thought from somewhere, by someone, whose somewhere shapes the thinking.
This is Mannheim's paradox, though he did not call it that. The sociology of knowledge is itself knowledge. If social position determines thought, the determination applies to the sentence stating it. The doctrine seems to eat itself, and generations of critics have said so.
Mannheim proposed two ways out, and Jost's career leans on descendants of both.
The first was relationism, which Mannheim insisted was not relativism. That perspectives are partial does not make them equal. Perspectives can be compared, checked against one another, and combined. A claim tied to a position can still be more or less adequate to its object, and the observer who understands the positional origins of competing views gains rather than loses the capacity to judge among them. Truth in social matters is perspectival the way vision is perspectival: every view is from an angle, and some angles see more, and several angles together see most of all.
The second way out was a social carrier for relationism. Mannheim borrowed a phrase from Alfred Weber (1868-1958), the freischwebende Intelligenz, the free-floating intelligentsia. Intellectuals, recruited from many classes and bound tightly to none, educated into rival traditions, might synthesize where partisans can only assert. They are not above society. They are loosely enough attached that the perspectives fighting below can meet in their heads. Mannheim's hope was that this stratum could produce, if never a view from nowhere, then at least a view from many somewheres, disciplined into coherence.
Now set Jost beside the framework, piece by piece.
System justification theory is the total conception of ideology built into an instrument. Mannheim defined ideology, as against utopia, by function: ideological thought stabilizes the existing order, utopian thought strains to burst it. Jost's theory measures the stabilizing function. The palliative effect of believing the world is fair, the poor-but-happy stereotype that balances the moral ledger of inequality, the depressed wage entitlement of subordinated groups, the surge of system defense under threat: each is a psychological account of how thought performs the work Mannheim assigned to ideology. The 1994 paper with Mahzarin Banaji cited the Frankfurt lineage and the concept of false consciousness by name. Where Mannheim had to reconstruct the social determination of belief from texts and historical cases, Jost could randomize it, prime it, and put confidence intervals on it. That is a genuine advance, and a Mannheimian would say so. It is also a narrowing. Mannheim's ideologies were whole styles of thought, conservative, liberal, socialist, each with its own conception of time, freedom, and reason. Jost's system justification is a single motive, scaled from one to nine. The laboratory paid for its precision with the wholeness of the thing described.
The paradox arrives on schedule, and it arrived in a hotel ballroom. When Jonathan Haidt stood before the assembled discipline in San Antonio in 2011 and counted three conservatives in a thousand chairs, he was performing the general total conception of ideology on social psychology itself. Your discipline is a thought-community, he was saying. Your sense of which questions matter, which findings feel right, which conclusions get waved through review, arises from your shared position. The sociology of knowledge had come home. And the discipline's leading theorist of ideology, sitting in that community, was the natural addressee, because his research program had spent two decades explaining conservatism as motivated cognition, need for order, threat sensitivity, resistance to change, from within a community with almost no conservatives in it to talk back.
Jost's reply, maintained across fifteen years, is that method is the answer to position. A finding is not refuted by the politics of the person who found it. Hypotheses can be tested by anyone, measures inspected by anyone, analyses rerun by anyone. Replication does not check your voter registration. The demand that the discipline diversify its politics mistakes the sociology of the field for the epistemology of its claims. Science, on this account, is the exit from Mannheim's paradox: a set of procedures that launders situated hunches into unsituated knowledge.
Mannheim considered that exit and allowed it only part way. He exempted mathematics and natural science from existential determination. Two plus two is not bourgeois. But social and political thought he refused to exempt, because there the categories themselves, before any measurement begins, carry position. And political psychology lives on the contested line between the two. A reaction-time measure is on the thermometer side of the line. But what of a scale for right-wing authoritarianism, whose items were written by researchers, whose name attaches pathology to one side of politics, and which has no twin of equal age and refinement on the left? What of the 2003 paper's twin definitions of conservatism, resistance to change and acceptance of inequality, which critics said built the conclusions into the coordinates? Jost has serious answers to each objection, and the answers are themselves research. But the objections are Mannheim's point in modern dress: the evaluative act hides upstream of the data, in the construction of the instrument, where method does not reach because method presupposes it. The exit Jost claims exists for the testing of claims. Mannheim denies it exists for the framing of them.
Both-sideology sharpens the case to its finest point. Jost's argument is that symmetry between left and right, in prejudice, in violence, in fidelity to democratic norms, is an empirical question, and that the evidence returns an asymmetric answer, and that a discipline which assumes symmetry out of politeness has substituted etiquette for inquiry. Read through Mannheim, the argument is stronger than Jost's critics allow and weaker than Jost allows. Stronger, because relationism licenses judgment. Mannheim never taught that all perspectives are equally adequate, and a social science forbidden to find asymmetries would be forbidden to find anything. The insistence that situated observers can still rank claims by evidence is Mannheim's own insistence. Weaker, because the finding of asymmetry depends on which behaviors were selected for counting, whose norms define defection, and which historical window frames the tally, and each selection is made by a scholar standing somewhere. Jost measures defection from the liberal-democratic rules of the game. A scholar standing elsewhere might count institutional capture, or speech suppression, or the quiet coercions of administrative power, and return a different ledger. The reply that those counts can be run too, and should be, is correct, and it concedes the Mannheimian premise: no single count is the view from nowhere, and the adequacy of the picture depends on how many angles get counted.
Here the essay must turn and look at its subject's formation, because Jost is himself a specimen of the stratum Mannheim nominated for the synthesizing role. Consider the profile. A professor's son from a house that held ancient philosophy and medieval literature and Marx. A detour into philosophy before the laboratory. Training under William J. McGuire, whose perspectivism, every theory true somewhere, the researcher's task to map the somewheres, is relationism translated into experimental practice. A career built on absorbing rival theories, social identity, cognitive dissonance, just-world belief, terror management, into a framework that assigns each its conditions. A business school appointment that gave him three years inside the thought-world of the dominant class he theorizes. Even the marriage joins perspectives: an American psychologist and a Hungarian clinician, Budapest and New York, and Mannheim's own trajectory ran Budapest to the Anglophone world. If the free-floating intelligentsia has a living exemplar in American social science, Jost has the credentials.
And yet Jost has declared a side, in print, with force, and here the frame springs its best surprise, because Mannheim did too. The Mannheim of 1929 stood on the balcony above the fighting perspectives. The Mannheim of wartime London came down. In Diagnosis of Our Time (1943) he called for militant democracy, a democratic order that plans, teaches values, and defends itself against the movements that destroyed his Germany, and he no longer wrote as if the synthesizer could stay unattached while the house burned. Exile taught him what the balcony costs. Jost's both-sideology address, with its invocation of Kurt Lewin the refugee and its warning that false balance endangers democracy itself, recapitulates Mannheim's arc: the theorist of situated knowledge, confronted with a movement he judges anti-democratic, decides that detachment has become a position too, and the most dishonest one available. Whether the judgment is right is a question about evidence. That the arc is the same is a fact about the tradition. The sociology of knowledge has twice produced its own refutation of neutrality, and both times under the pressure of the same fear.
So does the exit exist? The honest answer the frame yields is: partly, and not where Jost points. Method is real. It disciplines situated thinkers, catches some of their errors, and forces their claims into forms that opponents can attack. Jost's findings are not dissolved by his politics, and the demand that they be dismissed on demographic grounds is the particular conception of ideology wearing a lab coat. But method operates downstream of framing, and framing is where position lives, and no procedure yet devised desituates the framer. Mannheim's actual solution was never a procedure. It was an ecology: enough perspectives, in enough contact, with enough discipline, that the partialities collide and grind against each other and something rounder emerges. On that account, the answer to the paradox is not a standpoint but a fight, sustained and rule-governed, among observers who see from different angles and cannot exempt themselves.
Which returns, in the end, to the three hands in San Antonio. Jost has argued for fifteen years that the discipline's political monoculture does not invalidate its findings, and within the logic of testing he is right. Within the logic of framing, the monoculture is a missing instrument. The conservative colleagues who might have written the rival scales, run the rival counts, and framed the rival hypotheses are the absent angles in the ecology, and their absence weakens the very asymmetry claims Jost most wants to secure, because a count conducted from one side of the room, however rigorous, invites the total conception of ideology as a reply, and the reply now writes itself. Mannheim's paradox was never that situated science is impossible. It is that situated science earns its authority only in the collision of situations, and a field that has lost half its collisions is running the synthesis with one hemisphere. Jost, the most Mannheimian psychologist alive, has staked his late career on the claim that evidence can settle what perspective disputes. Mannheim's reply, from the far side of one exile and two catastrophes, might be that evidence settles disputes only inside an ecology of perspectives, and that the theorist of system justification, of all people, should ask what happens to the thought of a community that has made one perspective the system.
Notes
Dismissed from Frankfurt in April 1933 under the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service; he had held the chair since 1930; emigrated to the LSE; died in London January 9, 1947. Standard sources: Karl Mannheim and the Stanford Encyclopedia entry on the sociology of knowledge tradition. Ideology and Utopia first appeared in German in 1929; the expanded English translation, by Wirth and Shils, came in 1936. The particular/total distinction, relationism vs. relativism, and the ideology/utopia functional definitions are all from that book. The phrase freischwebende Intelligenz originates with Alfred Weber; Mannheim’s adoption of it is documented in Ideology and Utopia, Part III. “Militant democracy” appears in Mannheim’s Diagnosis of Our Time (1943); the term was coined earlier by Karl Loewenstein in 1937.
Jost and the Convenient Belief
In 2023 the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues gave John Jost its highest honor, the Kurt Lewin Award, and Jost used the award address to tell the assembled discipline that its political monoculture posed no serious threat to its science. The published version, “Both-Sideology Endangers Democracy and Social Science,” runs sixty-five pages in the Journal of Social Issues, with an admiring introduction by Mahzarin Banaji. The argument: claims that left and right are equally prejudiced, equally violent, and equally lax about democracy are false or misleading, one by one, on the evidence. The setting: a field that surveys itself at ratios approaching eighty liberals for every conservative, honoring a career built on the finding that the conservative mind runs on fear, rigidity, and the defense of hierarchy. The room applauded. Award audiences do. But hold the scene still for a moment. A professional community handed its top prize to a lecture assuring that community that its one glaring compositional fact carries no epistemic cost, and that the side almost none of its members belong to is the side that endangers democracy.
Stephen P. Turner (b. 1951) has spent a career explaining scenes like this one, and the explanation requires no villains. Expert communities are self-certifying. The public cannot check their claims; only members can, and membership is acquired through training, hiring, funding, and review, each administered by existing members. Inside such a community, beliefs are not selected by deception. They are selected by cost. A belief that smooths a career, flatters the group, and offends no one who controls a resource gets held, cited, taught, and awarded. A belief that threatens the community's self-understanding gets scrutinized to death, and the scrutiny feels, from inside, like rigor. Nobody lies. The incentive structure does the believing, and the individual experiences the result as his own honest judgment. Call the output a convenient belief: one whose holder pays nothing to hold it and something to drop it, and whose truth the community's own machinery is poorly built to test.
The asymmetry thesis is the convenient belief of American social psychology, and Jost is its most credentialed holder. Consider what it delivers. It tells a left-leaning discipline that its politics and its science point the same direction. It converts the field's compositional embarrassment from a liability into an irrelevance: the monoculture cannot bias the findings, because the findings survive method, and method is politically blind. It supplies, in the rigidity-of-the-right literature, a scientific account of why the missing conservatives are missing that requires no institutional self-examination: they lack the openness the work requires. And it licenses the discipline's members to carry their politics into public with the authority of their credentials, since on this account the politics are downstream of the evidence rather than upstream of it. Every one of those payments flows to the people doing the research. That is the structure of convenience, and it is visible from space.
Jost knows this, which distinguishes him from most holders of convenient beliefs and makes him the more instructive case. He has stated the objection himself, in nearly the terms above, and answered it: convenience does not make a belief false. He is right, and the point is elementary. The genetic fallacy cuts both ways; a claim is not refuted by the interests of the claimant, or every belief of every interested party would fall, including the belief that interested parties cannot be trusted. If the evidence shows asymmetry, the fact that the finding pleases the finders changes nothing about the evidence.
Turner's frame accepts the logic and relocates the question. The issue is never whether convenience proves falsehood. The issue is what testing machinery the belief faces, because a community cannot tell, from inside, the difference between a convenient truth and a convenient error. Both feel identical. Both survive internal review, because internal review is staffed by people for whom the belief is convenient. The only way to know which one you are holding is to expose the belief to people who pay a price for agreeing with you and profit from proving you wrong, and then see what survives. So the Turner question about Jost is concrete: what does the ledger of inconvenient findings look like, and how has he handled it?
The ledger has real entries. In 2022, Thomas Costello, Scott Lilienfeld (1960-2020), and colleagues published a psychometric case that left-wing authoritarianism is a coherent, measurable, and consequential construct, after decades in which the field had treated it as a myth; the paper became the most cited article the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology published that year, which suggests a hunger the discipline had not been feeding. In 2023 came the meta-analysis: Costello, Shauna Bowes, Ariel Malka, and colleagues pooled 708 effect sizes from 187,612 participants and found the rigidity-conservatism relationship heterogeneous to the point of instability, robust for social conservatism, small and inconsistent for economic conservatism outside the United States, and inflated in past work by criterion contamination and unrepresentative sampling. In 2020, a team led by Bert Bakker and Gijs Schumacher failed to replicate the famous physiological findings, publishing evidence that conservatives and liberals show similar bodily responses to threat; the startle-reflex literature that had put the fearful conservative amygdala into a thousand news stories did not survive contact with larger samples. And Mark Brandt and Jarret Crawford spent a decade showing that prejudice against ideological opponents runs symmetric: liberals and conservatives dislike the other side's groups at comparable strength, each side merely selects different targets.
None of this demolishes Jost's position, and honesty requires saying so. Social conservatism does correlate with rigidity measures in the meta-analysis he might otherwise fear. The LWA construct exists, and its existence does not establish that left and right authoritarianism are equal in prevalence or consequence in any given country in any given decade, which is the question Jost's democracy research addresses with behavioral and survey data of its own. The physiological failures wound a literature adjacent to his rather than the theory he built. A fair audit finds the asymmetry thesis damaged at the edges and standing at the center, for now, on the evidence available.
But watch how Jost handles the ledger, because the handling is where Turner's frame earns its keep. The both-sideology paper does not ignore the inconvenient literature; it prosecutes it. The LWA scale is dissected for validity problems. The symmetry findings are reframed. The pattern is consistent: findings congenial to the thesis are cited as evidence; findings inconvenient to it are cited as targets of methodological critique. Every scientist does some of this. The question is whether the critical energy is distributed by the quality of the studies or by the direction of their results, and that question cannot be answered by the man himself, because the distribution feels, from inside, like judgment. This is the sense in which there are truths Jost cannot afford. Not that he would suppress them. That his position prices them. A robust left-authoritarianism literature raises the cost of every sentence in the 2003 paper. A collapsed rigidity syndrome raises the cost of the framework that made his name. A field persuaded that its monoculture corrupts its framing devalues the entire inventory of a man whose findings the monoculture produced and rewarded. He can absorb any single entry on the ledger. He cannot cheaply absorb the ledger, and a mind in that position audits hostile evidence with a thoroughness it never applies to friendly evidence, while experiencing the difference as standards.
Now turn the frame around, because it turns, and Turner's whole point is that it turns. Viewpoint-diversity advocacy is convenient for its advocates, and the convenience is at least as legible. Heterodoxy in a crowded academic market is product differentiation: the eighty-first liberal social psychologist is inaudible, while the dissident commands op-ed pages, podcast invitations, donor networks, and book advances that orthodoxy never sees. Jonathan Haidt's career since San Antonio is the demonstration: the tribal-moral-community argument carried him out of the laboratory economy, where his empirical program had begun taking replication damage of its own, into a public-intellectual economy where the argument itself is the product and the customers are people who wanted academic psychology indicted. The Heterodox Academy runs on the claim that viewpoint diversity improves science, a claim its members test with roughly the vigor social psychologists apply to testing the asymmetry thesis, which is to say: the flagship belief of the reform movement is itself held conveniently, cited as self-evident, and rarely exposed to the possibility that ideologically mixed teams might produce not better science but stalemate, or that the missing conservatives might be missing partly for reasons other than discrimination. Both camps hold beliefs their positions pay them to hold. Both camps experience the holding as courage. The frame convicts neither and exempts neither; it says the two convictions cannot be adjudicated from inside either camp.
Which points at the machinery, and the machinery has started to exist. In 2026, Political Psychology published an adversarial collaboration on this exact battlefield: rigidity-of-the-right partisans, symmetry partisans, and rigidity-of-extremes partisans, including Philip Tetlock (b. 1954) among the adversaries, jointly preregistered two studies with more than six thousand participants, agreed on measures before seeing results, and published together. The finding was the kind adversarial work tends to produce: the answer depends on the question, on how rigidity is operationalized and which ideology dimension is measured, with each camp's hypothesis holding in some specifications and failing in others. Deflationary, unquotable, and worth more than a decade of dueling literatures, because every author paid in advance for the right to be believed. This is Turner's answer rendered as procedure. A convenient belief is laundered into knowledge only when its holder consents to a test designed by people who want him wrong, and the consent has to come before the data.
By that standard, the both-sideology address sits in an odd light. Its author's stated epistemology, method over membership, testable claims, transparent analysis, names exactly the machinery that could vindicate him, and the machinery now runs, and he is not conspicuous among its users. Jost debates his critics in print, at length, with skill, and print debate is the internal-review circuit where his advantages are maximal and the audience is the community for whom his conclusions are convenient. The harder venue, joint design with the Costellos and Malkas and Tetlocks before the results come in, is the one his own principles endorse and his position prices. Perhaps he will enter it; the man's appetite for combat is not in question. Until then, the Turner verdict is narrow and sufficient. The asymmetry thesis may well be true. The discipline that holds it cannot currently know that it knows, because the belief has been tested mainly by people it pays, in venues they control, against critics whose findings arrive pre-indicted. And the scholar who spent thirty years proving that human beings mistake the interests of their system for the structure of reality has produced, in his own career, the cleanest specimen the theory owns: a community defending the legitimacy of its arrangement, under threat, with rising confidence, and calling the defense evidence.
Notes
The rigidity meta-analysis: Costello, Bowes, Baldwin, Malka, Tasimi, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 124, pp. 1025-1052 (2023); the numbers in the essay, 708 effect sizes, N = 187,612, social vs. economic conservatism split, criterion contamination and sampling inflation, come from the abstract: PubMed. The LWA paper: Costello, Bowes, Stevens, Waldman, Tasimi, Lilienfeld (2022), JPSP, “Clarifying the Structure and Nature of Left-Wing Authoritarianism”; Costello’s own site claims it was the most cited JPSP article published in 2022. That claim is his, so you may want to soften to “among the most cited” if you can’t independently confirm. The adversarial collaboration: Bowes et al., Political Psychology 47, e70071 (2026), preregistered, total N = 6,181, adversaries including Tetlock and van Prooijen, with the “answer depends on the question” conclusion taken from the abstract: Wiley.
From knowledge, links to confirm. Bakker, Schumacher, Gothreau, Arceneaux, “Conservatives and Liberals Have Similar Physiological Responses to Threats,” Nature Human Behaviour (2020). Brandt and Crawford on symmetric ideological prejudice: their “ideological conflict hypothesis” program, summarized in Brandt et al., “The Ideological-Conflict Hypothesis,” Current Directions in Psychological Science (2014). Jost’s critique of the LWA scale and the symmetry literature is in the both-sideology paper itself. Banaji‘s introduction to the address: Wiley.
Extrapolations, flagged. “The room applauded. Award audiences do.” Self-evident extrapolation, marked as such in the text. The claim that Haidt‘s empirical program took replication damage refers to the moral foundations and social-intuitionist literatures, where measurement invariance and some disgust-priming findings have been contested; it is defensible but compressed, and it is the sentence a Haidt partisan will contest. The disgust-and-moral-judgment meta-analysis, Landy and Goodwin 2015, is the citable core. The characterization of Heterodox Academy‘s flagship claim as under-tested by its holders is my judgment; there is some supporting literature on ideological diversity and team performance either way, none decisive, which is the point, but it is argument rather than record.