Abstract: Belief persistence under disconfirmation — the maintenance of conviction against accumulating contrary evidence — represents one of the most consequential and least examined phenomena in social psychology and political analysis. At its centre lies the concept of load-bearing belief: a conviction whose revision would require simultaneous restructuring of the dependent network of beliefs, identities, and social arrangements it supports. Drawing on cognitive historiography, microhistorical evidential reasoning, and the cognitive inertia literature, the analysis traces the installation mechanisms through which ordinary beliefs acquire architectural status, examines the collective dimension of institutional belief maintenance, and identifies the detection paradox at the model's centre — the beliefs most important to identify are those rendered invisible by the very architecture they support. Empirical evidence from political psychology and institutional research complicates the model productively. What the framework reveals is not that belief revision is impossible but that it requires structural conditions, not merely evidence.
Angel Analytical Publications (Fri,) studied this question.