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Tylor Cosgrove notes that conspiracy theories spread wider in times of uncertainty, including during war, economic downturn and widespread hardship. He looks at the type of personalities that are drawn to them

Economy / opinion
Tylor Cosgrove notes that conspiracy theories spread wider in times of uncertainty, including during war, economic downturn and widespread hardship. He looks at the type of personalities that are drawn to them
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By Tylor Cosgrove*

If there are two things the internet loves talking about, it’s conspiracy theories, and who may or may not be a narcissist.

Misinformation and conspiratorial thinking are long-running concerns, while narcissism has become TikTok’s favourite armchair diagnosis.

Research shows the two concepts, though seemingly separate, may actually be closely linked.

In my new research published in the Journal of Personality and Individual Differences, more than 600 people completed surveys, and the findings show higher scores on measures of narcissism were linked to belief in conspiracy theories and misinformation.

Importantly, this result held true regardless of how educated the participants were.

 

Head vs heart

Scholarly evidence shows people with lower levels of education are more likely to believe in conspiracy theories. But that’s only part of the story.

We also know that historically, conspiracy theories have done well in times of uncertainty, including during war, economic downturn and widespread hardship (such as the COVID pandemic).

A prominent explanation for this is that conspiracy beliefs serve underlying psychological needs. These include providing answers when things are unclear or uncertain, providing a sense of control by identifying a powerful group to take action against, and for social reasons, such as showing others which political groups you belong to and signalling loyalty to those groups.

I wanted to find out when educated people might also “fall down the rabbit hole”, and learn more about which psychological needs lead them to do so.

The research

Over two studies, 660 adults were asked to complete a series of questionnaires to measure narcissistic traits. These included:

  • having a sense of superiority or entitlement (grandiosity)

  • needing to be unique (wanting to be special and stand out from others)

  • and a need for “cognitive closure”: a desire for concrete answers and viewing things as black and white.

The participants then answered how much they believed in certain conspiracy theories. One example put to them was: “the assassination of John F. Kennedy was not committed by the lone gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, but was rather a detailed, organised conspiracy to kill the President”.

They also attempted to distinguish true statements from misinformation, including “Ebola Virus Caused by US Nuclear Weapons Testing, New Study Says”.

The participants had varying levels of education, ranging from high school or less through to having a masters or doctorate. They also had a variety of political beliefs.

People who scored higher in narcissistic traits were more accepting of conspiracy theories and misinformation.

Importantly, this was true regardless of how educated the person was.

The results showed these traits might offset the differences linked to education. When these traits were above average, highly educated people were just as likely to endorse these beliefs as those without any formal education.

Why might this be?

Education often provides people with skills in evaluating evidence, critical thinking and a shared understanding of how we can find truth.

However, humans are quite good at “motivated reasoning”: using reasoning skills to come to pleasing conclusions because we want to believe something.

This type of reasoning is often linked to unfounded beliefs – those without evidence. When people feel superior to experts, want to feel special, or need a concrete answer during uncertain times, they might use their reasoning to hold certain beliefs despite a lack of evidence.

My research suggests educated people are not immune to this.

What can we do with this information?

It’s important to recognise there’s a variety of factors that determine people’s beliefs and which ones they hold most dear. These include the above personality traits and thinking styles, as well as factors like identity, how people view themselves and show support for the groups they belong to.

These findings suggest even highly educated people can be resistant to changing their mind if underlying psychological needs are threatened. It’s important to keep these in mind when discussing controversial topics. This is true whether talking with friends, family, or those with opposing political views to our own.

We should also take into consideration our own motivations and needs, and how these might influence our points of view. Doing so might help in finding common ground and improve social discourse on a larger scale.The Conversation


Tylor Cosgrove, Lecturer in Psychology, Adelaide UniversityThis article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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9 Comments

As a conspiracy theorist myself, it concerns me that the ruling elite and media have been able to weaponize any opinions that they don't like (or seen as a threat) and bundle those ideas as 'conspiracy theories' or misinformation. 

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It starts early. Infants are drawn into fantasy worlds by fairy tales and modern equivalents. An ever present form of escapism. Stories such as Peter Pan and The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe offered a world alternative to that of the the demands and expectations of the real life that young ones viewed, as daunting.  Such imaginations easily mature into adulthood similarly theorising about the supernatural and great conspiracies which of course are fuelled by any form of media or politician that can make a buck or a career out of it respectively. 

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I hear you. Remember when the WEF was talking about 15-min cities and people were gobbling up the nonsense like it made complete sense? The related conspiracy theory was  govts were planning to ration how often you can drive, shop, or leave your neighborhood, policed by CCTV and digital passes.

But what was more ridiculous? The conspiracy theory or the idea that countries like Aotearoa and Aussie could become 15-min cities? We are not Tokyo. And it's unlikely we ever could be. 

They bring it on themselves.

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""Scholarly evidence shows people with lower levels of education are more likely to believe in conspiracy theories.""

When is a theory a conspiracy theory? Iraq has weapons of mass destruction, face masks stop Covid infections, vaccination prevents Covid infection, rapid extinction of polar bears, all immigrants are good for the economy, the Y2K bug will destroy civilisation.  

A conjecture eventually is either proved false and put into the basket of conspiracy theory or proved true and becomes an accepted fact.

Academics do the proving so that leaves believers in those false theories as non-academic or 'uneducated' meanwhile the highly educated (but stupid) perform fancy mental gymnastics. I was a programmer who lived through Y2K - it was astonishing how fast it was forgotten without the least apology.

 

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The British post office scandal or MKUltra are theories proven true, blatant conspiracy evident by those involved.

But there's a long list of theories where an elaborate conspiracy claim does too much of the heavy lifting in order to prop up lack of evidence or deflect the ulterior motives behind it - suppose this is a conspiracy theory in itself huh..

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Solid article, very interesting. I'm keen to learn more. Thanks Tylor!

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Anyone interested in this should read The Intelligence Trap by David Robson. Part 1 The downsides of intelligence: How a high IQ, education and expertise can fuel stupidity. Misbelief by Dan Ariely-What makes rational people believe irrational things is another good read. This is an area that has been well studied.

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