The Irrational Animal


THE IRRATIONAL ANIMAL

A lot happened in 2016, but one of the biggest cultural shifts was the rise of fake news - where claims with no evidence behind them (e.g. the world is flat) get shared as fact alongside evidence-based, peer-reviewed findings (e.g. climate change is happening).

Researchers have coined this trend the ‘anti-enlightenment movement,’ and there’s been a lot of frustration and finger-pointing over who or what’s to blame. But a team of psychologists has identified some of the key factors that can cause people to reject science - and it has nothing to do with how educated or intelligent they are.

In fact, the researchers found that people who reject scientific consensus on topics such as climate change, vaccine safety, and evolution are generally just as interested in science and as well-educated as the rest of us.

The issue is that when it comes to facts, people think more like lawyers than scientists, which means they ‘cherry pick’ the facts and studies that back up what they already believe to be true.

So if someone doesn’t think humans are causing climate change, they will ignore the hundreds of studies that support that conclusion, but latch onto the one study they can find that casts doubt on this view. This is also known as cognitive bias.

“We find that people will take a flight from facts to protect all kinds of belief including their religious belief, their political beliefs, and even simple personal beliefs such as whether they are good at choosing a web browser,” said one of the researchers, Troy Campbell from the University of Oregon.

“People treat facts as relevant more when the facts tend to support their opinions. When the facts are against their opinions, they don't necessarily deny the facts, but they say the facts are less relevant.”

This conclusion was based on a series of new interviews, as well as a meta-analysis of the research that's been published on the topic, and was presented in a symposium called over the weekend as part of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology annual convention in San Antonio.

—Fiona Macdonald, “Researchers Say They’ve Figured Out What Makes People Reject Science, And It’s Not Ignorance,” ScienceAlert, January 23, 2017

 
It explains well resistance to empirical truths about climate change, the Marcos regime, Duterte governance, or the Opus Dei cult.

We should update Aristotle and define man as a rhetorical animal.

Comments

  1. Photo of locked door is in public domain.

    Photo link:

    https://pixabay.com/en/padlock-lock-door-closed-1003787/

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete
  2. PREYING ON CONFIRMATION BIAS

    At Russian President Vladimir Putin’s direction, three Russian companies used fake profiles to promote false narratives on social media, US Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a statement. Internal documents produced by one of those Russian companies show one of the goals of the propaganda effort was to boost the candidacy of Donald Trump or whoever emerged as the Republican nominee for president, according to an FBI affidavit.

    Separately, two employees of RT, the Russian state media network, were indicted in a US court for allegedly being part of a scheme that funneled nearly $10 million to set up and direct a Tennessee-based front company to produce online content aimed at sowing divisions among Americans, according to the Justice Department. The scheme targeted millions of American news consumers with what Attorney General Merrick Garland described as “hidden Russian government messaging.”

    https://edition.cnn.com/2024/09/04/politics/biden-administration-accuse-russia-election-influence-efforts/index.html

    —Sean Lyngaas, Evan Perez, Kylie Atwood, Zachary Cohen and Jennifer Hansler, “Biden administration announces major actions to tackle Russian efforts to influence 2024 election,” CNN.com, September 4, 2024

    Human beings evaluate information according to their confirmation bias so that they are susceptible to misinformation and disinformation.

    Gonzalinho

    ReplyDelete

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