Most people think uncertainty is just a private feeling — stress, anxiety, or fear about what comes next. But new research suggests it may do much more than that. Discomfort with uncertainty isn’t a private feeling. It can also shape how people respond to diversity, social change, and political ideas.
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🔗 How Reframing Uncertainty Could Change Attitudes to Diversity, Social Change, and Politics
This story explores how uncertainty, when it feels threatening, can harden attitudes and make people more defensive. But when it is reframed as something workable, people may become more open to difference, more supportive of change, and less drawn to right-wing populism.
It is a fascinating look at how human behaviour can shift depending on whether uncertainty feels unbearable or manageable — and why that matters far beyond private stress.
👇 📖 Read More:
🔗 How Reframing Uncertainty Could Change Attitudes to Diversity, Social Change, and Politics



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