The Inner Worlds of Conspiracy Believers

May 26, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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By Bruce Bower, Science News

Shortly after terrorist attacks destroyed the World Trade Center and mangled the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, conspiracy theories blossomed about secret and malevolent government plots behind the tragic events. A report scheduled to appear in an upcoming Applied Cognitive Psychology offers a preliminary psychological profile of people who believe in 9/11 conspiracies.

A team led by psychologist Viren Swami of the University of Westminster in London identified several traits associated with subscribing to 9/11 conspiracies, at least among British citizens. These characteristics consist of backing one or more conspiracy theories unrelated to 9/11, frequently talking about 9/11 conspiracy beliefs with likeminded friends and others, taking a cynical stance toward politics, mistrusting authority, endorsing democratic practices, feeling generally suspicious toward others and displaying an inquisitive, imaginative outlook.

“Often, the proof offered as evidence for a conspiracy is not specific to one incident or issue, but is used to justify a general pattern of conspiracy ideas,” Swami says.

His conclusion echoes a 1994 proposal by sociologist Ted Goertzel of Rutgers–Camden in New Jersey. After conducting random telephone interviews of 347 New Jersey residents, Goertzel proposed that each of a person’s convictions about secret plots serves as evidence for other conspiracy beliefs, bypassing any need for confirming evidence.

A belief that the government is covering up its involvement in the 9/11 attacks thus feeds the idea that the government is also hiding evidence of extraterrestrial contacts or that John F. Kennedy was not killed by a lone gunman.

Goertzel says the new study provides an intriguing but partial look at the inner workings of conspiracy thinking. Such convictions critically depend on what he calls “selective skepticism.” Conspiracy believers are highly doubtful about information from the government or other sources they consider suspect. But, without criticism, believers accept any source that supports their preconceived views, he says.

“Arguments advanced by conspiracy theorists tell you more about the believer than about the event,” Goertzel says.

Swami’s finding that 9/11 conspiracy believers frequently spoke with likeminded individuals supports the notion that “conspiracy thinkers constitute a community of believers,” remarks historian Robert Goldberg of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Goldberg has studied various conspiracy theories in the United States.

Conspiracy thinkers share an optimistic conviction that they can find “the truth,” spread it to the masses and foster social change, Goldberg asserts.

Over the past 50 years, researchers and observers of social dynamics have traced beliefs in conspiracy theories to feelings of powerlessness, attempts to bolster self-esteem and diminished faith in government. Some conspiracy beliefs — such as the widespread conviction among blacks that the U.S. government concocted HIV/AIDS as a genocidal plot — gain strength from actual events, such as the once-secret Tuskegee experiments in which black men with syphilis were denied treatment.

Swami and his colleagues administered a battery of questionnaires to 257 British adults, including a condensed version of a standard personality test. Participants came from a variety of ethnic, religious and social backgrounds representative of the British population.

Most participants expressed either no support or weak support for 16 conspiracy beliefs about 9/11. These beliefs included: “The World Trade Center towers were brought down by a controlled demolition” and, “Individuals within the U.S. government knew of the impending attacks and purposely failed to act on that knowledge.”

Much as Swami’s team suspected, beliefs in 9/11 conspiracy theories were stronger among individuals whose personalities combined suspicion and antagonism toward others with intellectual curiosity and an active imagination.

A related, unpublished survey of more than 1,000 British adults found that 9/11 conspiracy believers not only often subscribed to a variety of well-known conspiracy theories, but also frequently agreed with an invented conspiracy. Christopher French of Goldsmiths, University of London, and Patrick Leman of Royal Holloway, University of London, both psychologists, asked volunteers about eight common conspiracy theories and one that researchers made up: “The government is using mobile phone technology to track everyone all the time.”

The study, still unpublished, shows that conspiracy believers displayed a greater propensity than nonbelievers to jump to conclusions based on limited evidence.

“It seems likely that conspiratorial beliefs serve a similar psychological function to superstitious, paranormal and, more controversially, religious beliefs, as they help some people to gain a sense of control over an unpredictable world,” French says.

Swami now plans to investigate attitudes of British volunteers to conspiracy theories about the July 7, 2005, terrorist bombings in London.

Tags:
9/11,
science,
behavior

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lol, I love how the only people commenting on the article are conspiracy theorists, and I agree with what this article is saying completely. I've had debates with probably around 150 conspiracy theorists to date, and I feel like I could almost write a paper about them myself because they do have definite things in common. One of the biggest things I've found, is that they will often "repeat conclusions" rather than "understand evidence", or truly do a personal investigation of the raw facts being used to support a conspiracy, especially if believing in the conspiracy is a trait of a social group that they subscribe to.

For example, as one of the comments on this article said, "no modern steel framed high rise skyscraper can ever fall straight down at free fall velocity as the result of 'building fires.'" Yet we know of at least 3, the Windsor Tower, Kader Toy Factory, and The McCormick Center. In addition, the steel-framed University of Aberdeen zoology building also collapsed completely (though that one wasn't fire-related).

Often their arguments are based on a lack of personal discovery, and focus heavily instead on believing what others (whom they deeply trust) have told them about the evidence, so long as the input from those people they trust doesn't contradict the beliefs they already hold. Then those who disagree with them are always "sheep" or "part of the conspiracy".

What I've frequently found as well, is that the things they believe, seem to be used to support many other beliefs they already hold to be self-evident truths, such as "the government is controlling everyone/everything". They use this "self-evident truth" because they see it as being integral to so many of their other "truths". In essence, this explanatory framework creates a fragile "house of cards" outlook on the world where, if one card falls, the whole thing could fall (since so many conclusions are inter-dependent). Thus, they tend to easily ignore contradictory evidence because their beliefs are based on the idea that people are constantly trying to "trick them" by feeding them false information.

CB of CA 1:30AM January 16, 2013

As an academic psychologist I'd have to say that these service-intellectuals are full of sh*t and an embarrassment to any critical scientist worldwide!

macmarine of GA 5:07AM October 24, 2012

Breaking News:Psychologists are often delusional. A new, unpublished study reveals that psychologists, particularly those who work for large universities, suffer a higher rate of delusions, personality disorders, and "feelings of omnipotence". The results of the telephone survey of 300 psychologists revealed that they are more likely to follow intellectual fads and trends, particularly if money is involved. They scored lower than average in critical thinking skills and analytical reasoning. Veteran investigator Christopher Bell is not suprised. " They love fascism. It's endemic in their profession, going back to the days of Freud and Jung."

wearelegion of MN 10:03PM September 06, 2012

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