Who Believes in Conspiracy Theories Study
The Apollo moon landing was staged. The CIA killed JFK. 9/11
was a plot by the U.S. government to justify a war in the Middle East.
President Barack Obama was not a natural born citizen. The massacre at Sandy
Hook elementary school was staged as a pretense for increased gun control. The
"deep state" is trying to destroy Donald Trump's presidency.
Conspiracy theories have been cooked up throughout history,
but they are increasingly visible lately, likely due in part to the president
of the United States routinely embracing or creating them.
Given that any particular conspiracy theory is unlikely to
be the subject of mainstream consensus, what draws people to them?
New research by Josh Hart, associate professor of
psychology, suggests that people with certain personality traits and cognitive
styles are more likely to believe in conspiracy theories. The research was
recently published in the Journal of Individual Differences.
"These people tend to be more suspicious, untrusting,
eccentric, needing to feel special, with a tendency to regard the world as an
inherently dangerous place," Hart said. "They are also more likely to
detect meaningful patterns where they might not exist. People who are reluctant
to believe in conspiracy theories tend to have the opposite qualities."
Hart and his student, Molly Graether '17, surveyed more than
1,200 American adults. Participants were asked a series of questions related to
their personality traits, partisan bent and demographic background. They were
also asked whether they agreed with generic conspiratorial statements, such as:
"The power held by heads of state is second to that of small unknown
groups who really control world politics," and "Groups of scientists
manipulate, fabricate or suppress evidence in order to deceive the
public."
Previous research has shown that people gravitate toward
conspiracy theories that affirm or validate their political view: Republicans
are vastly more likely than Democrats to believe the Obama "birther"
theory or that climate change is a hoax. Democrats are more likely to believe
that Trump's campaign "colluded" with the Russians, Hart said.
Some people are also habitual conspiracists who entertain a
variety of generic theories. For example, they believe that world politics are
controlled by a cabal instead of governments or that scientists systematically
deceive the public. This indicates that personality or other individual
differences might be at play.
Hart and Graether wanted to build on this research by
testing how much each of several previously identified traits could explain
generic conspiracy beliefs. By examining multiple traits simultaneously, the
pair could determine which ones were most important.
"Our results clearly showed that the strongest
predictor of conspiracy belief was a constellation of personality
characteristics collectively referred to as 'schizotypy,' Hart said.
The trait borrows its name from schizophrenia, but it does
not imply a clinical diagnosis. Hart's study also showed that conspiracists had
distinct cognitive tendencies: they were more likely than nonbelievers to judge
nonsensical statements as profound (a tendency known as "BS
receptivity").
In turn, they were more likely to say that nonhuman objects
-- triangle shapes moving around on a computer screen -- were acting
intentionally.
"In other words, they inferred meaning and motive where
others did not," he said.
So what does this all mean?
"First, it helps to realize that conspiracy theories
differ from other worldviews in that they are fundamentally gloomy," Hart
said. "This sets them apart from the typically uplifting messages conveyed
by, say, religious and spiritual beliefs. At first blush this is a conundrum.
However, if you are the type of person who looks out at the world and sees a
chaotic, malevolent landscape full of senseless injustice and suffering, then
perhaps there is a modicum of comfort to be found in the notion that there is
someone, or some small group of people, responsible for it all. If 'there's
something going on,' then at least there is something that could be done about
it."
Hart hopes the research advances the understanding of why
some people are more attracted to conspiracy theories than others. But he said
it is important to note that the study doesn't address whether or not
conspiracy theories are true.
"After Watergate, the American public learned that
seemingly outlandish speculation about the machinations of powerful actors is
sometimes right on the money," he said. "And when a conspiracy is
real, people with a conspiracist mindset may be among the first to pick up on
it while others get duped.
"Either way, it is important to realize that when
reality is ambiguous, our personalities and cognitive biases cause us to adopt
the beliefs that we do. This knowledge can help us understand our own
intuitions."
This all reminds me of a quote from Alan Moore, influential comic book writer and self-proclaimed anarchist:
I don't think that you can categorize who believes in conspiracy theories and who doesn't by simply slapping a label on their psyche. If that were the case, then theoretically, you could do the same thing with people that believe in God, and their differing personality traits from someone who believes in the Buddha.“The main thing that I learned about conspiracy theory, is that conspiracy theorists believe in a conspiracy because that is more comforting. The truth of the world is that it is actually chaotic. The truth is that it is not The Illuminati, or The Jewish Banking Conspiracy, or the Gray Alien Theory.
The truth is far more frightening - Nobody is in control.
The world is rudderless.”
We believe these things - or rather, we want to believe these stories and ideas because the world is confusing, unpredictable, and scary. When you give evil a face (Illuminati, Aliens, Big Brother), it allows the masses to huddle together against it. It gives people hope that maybe one day that evil will be vanquished by good.
That's how we've all grown up in our world, isn't it? Stories of good vs. evil with good always triumphing in the end. No matter how dark it gets, there's always a small light at the end of the tunnel that will lead us to bliss. If people could really look past all the stories; see the truth hidden inside of the lie; then we could begin really pushing humanity through that second threshold and evolve to un-imagined possibilities.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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