Believing the impossible and conspiracy theories

Posted On: January 26, 2012 - 8:30pm

Los Angeles, CA - Distrust and paranoia about government has a long history, and the feeling that there is a conspiracy of elites can lead to suspicion for authorities and the claims they make. For some, the attraction of conspiracy theories is so strong that it leads them to endorse entirely contradictory beliefs, according to a study in the current Social Psychological and Personality Science (published by SAGE).

People who endorse conspiracy theories see authorities as fundamentally deceptive. The conviction that the "official story" is untrue can lead people to believe several alternative theories-despite contradictions among them. "Any conspiracy theory that stands in opposition to the official narrative will gain some degree of endorsement from someone who holds a conpiracist worldview," according to Michael Wood, Karen Douglas and Robbie Sutton of the University of Kent.

To see if conspiracy views were strong enough to lead to inconsistencies, the researchers asked 137 college students about the death of Princess Diana. The more people thought there "was an official campaign by the intelligence service to assassinate Diana," the more they also believed that "Diana faked her own death to retreat into isolation." Of course, Diana cannot be simultaneously dead and alive.

The researchers wanted to know if the contradictory beliefs were due to suspicion of authorities, so they asked 102 college students about the death of Osama bin Laden (OBL). People who believed that "when the raid took place, OBL was already dead," were significantly more likely to also believe that "OBL is still alive." Since bin Laden is not Schrödinger's cat, he must either be alive or dead. The researchers found that the belief that the "actions of the Obama administration indicate that they are hiding some important or damaging piece of information about the raid" was responsible for the connection between the two conspiracy theories. Conspiracy belief is so potent that it will lead to belief in completely inconsistent ideas.

"For conspiracy theorists, those in power are seen as deceptive-even malevolent-and so any official explanation is at a disadvantage, and any alternative explanation is more credible from the start," said the authors. It is no surprise that fear, mistrust, and even paranoia can lead to muddled thinking; when distrust is engaged, careful reasoning can coast on by. "Believing Osama is still alive," they write, 'is no obstacle to believing that he has been dead for years."

I don't believe this. It is obviously a ploy by the elites to convince us that our understanding of major events is flawed.

Everybody knows 9/11 was an black flag inside job and that there was a sniper on the grassy knoll and the moon landings were staged, the world is flat, the sun circles the earth and God created everything 50 centuries ago.

pop

This press release talks about contradictions between different theories. That is not really a problem for the conspiracist because he has no problem with contradictions internal to each theory on its own.

If he claims, for instance, that a certain ethnic group didn't show up for work on 9/11 because they were warned ahead of time, but there is no evidence of phone calls or emails providing such warnings, he will take that as proof that such communications were encrypted and then destroyed by some nefarious intelligence agency.

The mere fact that theory doesn't make sense proves its truth and the evil motives of those hiding the truth.

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