The present work discusses the phenomenon of conservativism from a qualitative
cultural-psychological perspective. As such the text breaks with current mainstream research
about political ideologies wanting to assess a political culture within the simple
administration of a questionnaire. The SpringerBrief will oppose such a perspective trying to
assess how the conservative-minded person will structure space and time in peculiar ways. In
the first part of the study participants were invited to reflect about how they preserve or
conserve meaning in various activities whereas the second part of the study tried to shed light
onto how something preservable or conservable comes into being and what it actually makes it
preservable. Here an autoethnographic study revealed that something becomes meaningfully
preservable when it satisfies multiple demands of the Self as well as of the environment.
Readers will realize the insufficiency of the positivistic attitude analyzing conservativism
from a simple quantitative perspective and researchers are shown how political ideologies or
cultures can be assessed ecologically - something that has not yet been undertaken. This leads
to an appeal for scientists to study the phenomenon of conservativism more wholistically.