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Etymology edit

Coined by William H. Whyte in 1952, from group +‎ think, modelled on earlier doublethink from Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four.

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Noun edit

groupthink (countable and uncountable, plural groupthinks)

  1. A process of reasoning or decision-making by a group, especially one characterized by uncritical acceptance of or conformity to a perceived majority view.
    • 1973 May 28, Irving L. Janis, “Groupthink in Washington”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      At present we do not know what percentage of all national fiascoes are attributable to groupthink. Some decisions of poor quality that turn out to be fiascoes might be ascribed primarily to mistakes made by just one man, the Chief Executive. Others arise because of a faulty policy formulated by a group of executives whose decision‐making procedures were impaired by errors having little or nothing to do with groupthink.
    • 2005 July 12, Jacob Weisberg, “The Anonymity Trap”, in Slate Magazine[2]:
      This gang-bang speaks more to journalistic groupthink than to any real moral or legal reasoning.
    • 2011, Mark Briggs, Entrepreneurial Journalism: How to Build What's Next for News, CQ Press, →ISBN, page 129:
      Anyone who works for a news organization (or any large corporation, for that matter) can weave tales of woe around all the planning, brainstorming, off-site retreats and other groupthinks that led nowhere.
    • 2012, Christopher Clark, The Sleepwalkers, Penguin, published 2013, page 395:
      A militant group-think seized hold of the ministry.

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