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Why Do People Believe Stupid Stuff?

Christopher O'Brien

Back in the Saddle Aginn
Staff member
[Insightful article, well worth reading—especially by those of the "kool-aid drinkin" &/or "jello-slurpin" persuasion :eek: ... chris]

Article HERE:

By David McRainey/Alternet

The Misconception:
When your beliefs are challenged with facts, you alter your opinions and incorporate the new information into your thinking.

The Truth: When your deepest convictions are challenged by contradictory evidence, your beliefs get stronger.

Wired, The New York Times, Backyard Poultry Magazine – they all do it. Sometimes, they screw up and get the facts wrong. In ink or in electrons, a reputable news source takes the time to say “my bad.” If you are in the news business and want to maintain your reputation for accuracy, you publish corrections. For most topics this works just fine, but what most news organizations don’t realize is a correction can further push readers away from the facts if the issue at hand is close to the heart. In fact, those pithy blurbs hidden on a deep page in every newspaper point to one of the most powerful forces shaping the way you think, feel and decide – a behavior keeping you from accepting the truth.

In 2006, Brendan Nyhan and Jason Reifler at The University of Michigan and Georgia State University created fake newspaper articles about polarizing political issues. The articles were written in a way which would confirm a widespread misconception about certain ideas in American politics. As soon as a person read a fake article, researchers then handed over a true article which corrected the first. For instance, one article suggested the United States found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. The next said the U.S. never found them, which was the truth. Those opposed to the war or who had strong liberal leanings tended to disagree with the original article and accept the second. Those who supported the war and leaned more toward the conservative camp tended to agree with the first article and strongly disagree with the second. These reactions shouldn’t surprise you. What should give you pause though is how conservatives felt about the correction. After reading that there were no WMDs, they reported being even more certain than before there actually were WMDs and their original beliefs were correct.

They repeated the experiment with other wedge issues like stem cell research and tax reform, and once again, they found corrections tended to increase the strength of the participants’ misconceptions if those corrections contradicted their ideologies. People on opposing sides of the political spectrum read the same articles and then the same corrections, and when new evidence was interpreted as threatening to their beliefs, they doubled down. The corrections backfired.

Once something is added to your collection of beliefs, you protect it from harm. You do it instinctively and unconsciously when confronted with attitude-inconsistent information. Just as confirmation bias shields you when you actively seek information, the backfire effect defends you when the information seeks you, when it blindsides you. Coming or going, you stick to your beliefs instead of questioning them. When someone tries to correct you, tries to dilute your misconceptions, it backfires and strengthens them instead. Over time, the backfire effect helps make you less skeptical of those things which allow you to continue seeing your beliefs and attitudes as true and proper.

In 1976, when Ronald Reagan was running for president of the United States, he often told a story about a Chicago woman who was scamming the welfare system to earn her income. Reagan said the woman had 80 names, 30 addresses and 12 Social Security cards which she used to get food stamps along with more than her share of money from Medicaid and other welfare entitlements. He said she drove a Cadillac, didn’t work and didn’t pay taxes. He talked about this woman, who he never named, in just about every small town he visited, and it tended to infuriate his audiences. The story solidified the term “Welfare Queen” in American political discourse and influenced not only the national conversation for the next 30 years, but public policy as well. It also wasn’t true.

Sure, there have always been people who scam the government, but no one who fit Reagan’s description ever existed. The woman most historians believe Reagan’s anecdote was based on was a con artist with four aliases who moved from place to place wearing disguises, not some stay-at-home mom surrounded by mewling children.

Despite the debunking and the passage of time, the story is still alive. The imaginary lady who Scrooge McDives into a vault of foodstamps between naps while hardworking Americans struggle down the street still appears every day on the Internet. The memetic staying power of the narrative is impressive. Some version of it continues to turn up every week in stories and blog posts about entitlements even though the truth is a click away.

Psychologists call stories like these narrative scripts, stories that tell you what you want to hear, stories which confirm your beliefs and give you permission to continue feeling as you already do. If believing in welfare queens protects your ideology, you accept it and move on. You might find Reagan’s anecdote repugnant or risible, but you’ve accepted without question a similar anecdote about pharmaceutical companies blocking research, or unwarranted police searches, or the health benefits of chocolate. You’ve watched a documentary about the evils of…something you disliked, and you probably loved it. For every Michael Moore documentary passed around as the truth there is an anti-Michael Moore counter documentary with its own proponents trying to convince you their version of the truth is the better choice.

A great example of selective skepticism is the website literallyunbelievable.org. They collect Facebook comments of people who believe articles from the satire newspaper The Onion are real. Articles about Oprah offering a select few the chance to be buried with her in an ornate tomb, or the construction of a multi-billion dollar abortion supercenter, or NASCAR awarding money to drivers who make homophobic remarks are all commented on with the same sort of “yeah, that figures” outrage.

As the psychologist Thomas Gilovich said, “”When examining evidence relevant to a given belief, people are inclined to see what they expect to see, and conclude what they expect to conclude…for desired conclusions, we ask ourselves, ‘Can I believe this?,’ but for unpalatable conclusions we ask, ‘Must I believe this?’”

This is why hardcore doubters who believe Barack Obama was not born in the United States will never be satisfied with any amount of evidence put forth suggesting otherwise. When the Obama administration released his long-form birth certificate in April of 2011, [complete w/ photoshop layers of data changes intact :0] the reaction from birthers was as the backfire effect predicts. They scrutinized the timing, the appearance, the format – they gathered together online and mocked it. They became even more certain of their beliefs than before.
[I have an original version w/ the photoshop layers... just say'in :p]

The same has been and will forever be true for any conspiracy theory or fringe belief. Contradictory evidence strengthens the position of the believer. It is seen as part of the conspiracy, and missing evidence is dismissed as part of the coverup.

This helps explain how strange, ancient and kooky beliefs resist science, reason and reportage. It goes deeper though, because you don’t see yourself as a kook. You don’t think thunder is a deity going for a 7-10 split. You don’t need special underwear to shield your libido from the gaze of the moon. Your beliefs are rational, logical and fact-based, right? REST OF ARTICLE HERE:
 
Its true, but i'd seperate folklore and ancient beliefs from modern day scam and propaganda, both are similar but different end goals, one is to keep certain people in line and the other is to manipulate and sway people to one side... still why not believe thunder could be from God, Thor, and Zeus bowling for who controls what? ;)
 
still why not believe thunder could be from God, Thor, and Zeus bowling for who controls what? ;)

For me personally the answer is because if you accept that as an explanation, then you dont bother seeking the correct answer.

For me thats the difference between religion and science.

Understanding the mechanisms of reality via answers that have been made up, or by answers that have been tested and can be changed if the tests give a better answer.
Religious answers tend to be imutable, scientific ones are flexible.

The advantages of having a correct understandinmg and knowledge of a given mechanism are best illustrated with medical science.

Understanding the true nature of the mechanism that causes disease, allows you to address and cure it in many examples.
And beats the heck out of having the tribal witchdoctor shake a dead chicken over you and demanding the evil spirits responsible for what ails you to leave your body.

Put simply accurate knowledge will always be a better tool than superstition
 
Now I understand more clearly why conservatives in the USA are in some ways anti-science. Since science does not confirm their narrow minded, often Biblically defined, version of reality, they deny science. Changing their beliefs would be too difficult, so any cognitive dissonance is handled by aggressively affirming their personal dogma (often taken from bronze age teachings) and aggressively attacking science itself (while ironically using all the products and services that science has provided modern civilization). Are all people immutable? No. From personal experience, I know that people can change and evolve over time, often based on undeniable personal experience (rather than second hand information that is not mirrored in their own lives). Others do not change, putting dogma above reality. For example,. the great conservative Phyllis Schlaffry has a gay son, but still demonizes gay people. She also claims that a woman's place is in the home as a housewife. Somehow she doesn't see the irony in that she lectures on this point while traveling all over the country, far from her own kitchen.
 
For me personally the answer is because if you accept that as an explanation, then you dont bother seeking the correct answer.

For me thats the difference between religion and science.

Understanding the mechanisms of reality via answers that have been made up, or by answers that have been tested and can be changed if the tests give a better answer.
Religious answers tend to be imutable, scientific ones are flexible.

The advantages of having a correct understandinmg and knowledge of a given mechanism are best illustrated with medical science.

Understanding the true nature of the mechanism that causes disease, allows you to address and cure it in many examples.
And beats the heck out of having the tribal witchdoctor shake a dead chicken over you and demanding the evil spirits responsible for what ails you to leave your body.

Put simply accurate knowledge will always be a better tool than superstition

Thats true, but I was being only funny with that line, You can knock me, but I do see things a different way than most, I like see Magic(majick,etc) and Science together, I see it as or picture things as Magick (believer) and Science (skeptic). People are A or B, I would like to see A or B be AB, where experiments are taken in a way that one compliments the other, religion in your opinion shouldnt be involve with scientific study but then again shouldnt be completley dissmissed. I believe both should be considered in a appropiete way and working together will find the answer. I dont know if you understand what im saying at all but you just cant sit there and tell me 3 Gods bowling are impossible while our medical science should be looked at it in terms of answer finding- when itself is horribly imperfect. I mean look at it this way, leaning toward the witchdoctor side, If you understand how certain roots and herbs work, I seen it work and fix people amamzingly where our medical science today (I am not dissimissing it, not my intentions at all), generally manages our sickenesses ( not counting surgery, etc), Now if both work together, maybe our medical science and science in general can advance more. religion out of things, if you do have a evil spirit in your body, psychotropic drugs would cause more damage
 
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