Opinion Occlusion
Appearance
opinion occlusion
Etymology
opinion (Latin opinio, belief, conjecture) + occlusion (Latin occlusio, a shutting up, blockage).
Noun
opinion occlusion (uncountable and countable, plural opinion occlusions)
- (social psychology) The suppression of a sincerely held view due to social pressure, conformity norms, or anticipated consequence. Distinguished from reticence in that the opinion exists but is actively withheld.
- The unanimous vote was less a consensus than a product of opinion occlusion, with several members privately dissenting.
- (epistemology, media studies) The systemic sidelining of a viewpoint through agenda-setting, framing, or noise rather than direct censorship.
- Any force, mechanism, or structure that blocks or suppresses an opinion or range of opinions from expression or consideration, particularly those originating from an opposing viewpoint or rival ideological tradition.
- (rhetoric, informal) Any mechanism, deliberate or structural, by which a genuine judgment is displaced in expression by a safer or more palatable substitute.
- His carefully worded non-answer was textbook opinion occlusion, saying everything except what he actually thought.
Related terms
See also
References
- MoribundMurdoch. "Opinion Occlusion [オピニオン・オクルージョン] Anything that obstructs or closes an opinion or a range of opinions (esp. opinions from an opposing camp or rival ideology)." The Moribundity Learns, Facebook, January 21, 2022. https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1CqDvwmwZ3/.
- MoribundMurdoch. "Opinion Occlusion [オピニオン・オクルージョン] Anything that obstructs or closes an opinion or a range of opinions (esp. opinions from an opposing camp or rival ideology)." Twitter, January 21, 2022, https://x.com/MoribundMurdoch/status/1484706935547084805?s=20 .
- One Reason for Wikipedia's Opinion Occlusion