A new study....

ChrryBlstr

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Feb 11, 2002
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I would love to be involved in this type of research and for it to be expanded and carried out worldwide. It would be absolutely interesting to see the results, especially the comparisons between countries.

Peace! :)


Conspiracy theorists lack critical thinking skills: New study

The more people believe in conspiracy theories, the worse they perform on critical thinking tests, a new study has confirmed.

This doesn?t mean that conspiracy theorists are necessarily lacking intelligence, but rather that they lack the skills to objectively analyse and evaluate a situation.

The good news is that people can be taught these skills, and to an extent be brought in from the dark side ? but of course it?s complicated.
?They?re out to get us? ? or so the theory goes

Conspiracy theories are nothing new, but they have greater reach and intensity with the advent of social media.

As explained by Anthony Lantian, an associate professor of psychology at the Paris Nanterre University and a co-author of the new study: ?Conspiracy theories refer to attempts to explain the ultimate cause of an important event (social, political, climatic, etc.) by accusing a hidden coalition of perceived malicious and powerful people or organisations of having secretly planned and implemented these events.?

For example, there?s a persistent conspiracy theory that shady figures in the US government were complicit in events of 9/11 ? where airliners were flown into the World Trade Centre towers, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania ? and the attacks weren?t simply the work of Islamic terrorists.

The QAnon conspiracy theory of a global Satanic network of pedophiles run by political elites is so widespread and powerful that it led to the election of a true believer, Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, to Congress.

Then, of course, there?s the idea that the COVID-19 pandemic was created on purpose by Chinese scientists (not to be confused with the theory that the coronavirus accidentally escaped a lab in Wuhan).
The answer to all this nuttiness?

The French researchers ran two studies, where they assessed the critical thinking skills of 338 undergraduate students using a French version of a teaching and testing tool known as the Ennis-Weir Critical Thinking Essay Test.

They then scored the students? tendencies towards conspiracy beliefs and their personal assessment of their critical thinking skills.

Critical thinking is the objective analysis and evaluation of a situation ? and requires a number of cognitive skills.

These include the ability to think systematically, see other perspectives, change your mind when new evidence arises, identify relevant versus irrelevant information, identify and discard logical fallacies, be aware of biases and avoid them, and look beyond the obvious.

None of this is particularly easy.

What the researchers found was a strong association between lower critical thinking skills and an increased tendency toward believing conspiracy theories.

This isn?t a new idea ? instead, it persuasively builds on previous research.

A series of studies, written up in one 2014 paper, concluded that teaching analytical thinking can reduce or protect against the adoption of conspiracy theories.

A 2017 study found that analytical thinking could be taught successfully to 10-year-old and 12-year-old children.

Ego and personality tend to resist a change in thinking

It?s wonderful having a cure for dangerous thinking, but how do you get the afflicted to take it up?

A series of experiments in 2016 established a ?robust association? between a need for uniqueness (a person?s need to feel special), a conspiracy mentality, and the endorsement of specific conspiracy beliefs.

In other words, the desire to be seen as unique and special serves as a motivation for conspiracy theorising.

This calls into question the nature of crazy belief. It may be a case that, for some people, ego trumps everything else.

It?s worth considering this when puzzling the apparently self-destructive behaviour of conspiracy celebrities.

Last year, celebrity chef and conspiracy theorist Pete Evans was fired by Channel Ten on the day he was to start filming I?m a Celebrity ? Get Me Out Of Here!

He lost his cookbook publisher, millions of dollars in endorsements and future TV appearances for posting a neo-Nazi symbol on Instagram.

His Facebook and Instagram accounts have since been shut down because of sharing misinformation about the coronavirus.

He?s been fined $80,000 by the TGA for allegedly spruiking dodgy wellness products.

As his reach has dwindled, along with his income, Evans has remained unrepentant.

You might wonder: ?What was he thinking??

https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/science/2021/07/25/conspiracy-theorists-lack-critical-thinking/
 

Skulnik

Truth Teller
Forum Member
Mar 30, 2007
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Racist graffiti that led to walkouts was made by nonwhite student, Missouri school district says

The Washington Examiner ^ | 09/29/2021 | Luke Gentile
Racist graffiti found in a Missouri high school's bathrooms was the product of a "hate hoax," the school district announced Tuesday. When faculty at Parkway Central High School in St. Louis County announced that racist graffiti had been uncovered earlier in September, students and community members across the district staged a walkout in condemnation of the incident. However, the culprit behind the graffiti was a nonwhite student, according to a letter sent to parents, Supt. Keith Marty announced Tuesday. "The student responsible is not white," Marty wrote. "This does not diminish the hurt it caused or the negative impact it...


https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/hate-hoax-missouri-high-school-graffiti
 

Skulnik

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Forum Member
Mar 30, 2007
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0
Jefferson City, Missouri
HATE HOAX: Former employee arrested for incident of racism, anti-Semitism at Emory Autism Center. Turns out, he's black.
A former part-time/temporary employee at Emory Autism Center has been arrested after graffiti, racial slurs and swastikas were discovered Aug. 9 at the center.

Roy Lee Gordon Jr. has been charged with second-degree burglary, Emory officials said in a news release that indicated Gordon is also the same person who allegedly wrote the ?N-word? and drew swastikas at the Emory Autism Center last month. He is a former employee of the university.

[link to www.cbs46.com (secure)]
[link to www.amren.com (secure)]
[link to www.ajc.com (secure)]
 

WhatsHisNuts

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www.ffrf.org
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Conspiracy theorists lack critical thinking skills: New study


Skulnik, Cricket, REFLOG, Raymond, Buddy, and Hedgehog demonstrate this all the time. They bite on the headlines because they want them to be true. They never take the time to think them through. It's embarrassing.

Skulnik has to to come across a conspiracy theory he didn't think was legit.
Cricket can't tell the difference between right wing satire news sites and regular right wing media.
REFLOG can't tell this difference between a parody site and a real one.

Sad. Pity really.
 

zig

Registered User
Forum Member
Feb 13, 2000
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WI
I would love to be involved in this type of research and for it to be expanded and carried out worldwide. It would be absolutely interesting to see the results, especially the comparisons between countries.

Peace! :)


Conspiracy theorists lack critical thinking skills: New study

The more people believe in conspiracy theories, the worse they perform on critical thinking tests, a new study has confirmed.

This doesn?t mean that conspiracy theorists are necessarily lacking intelligence, but rather that they lack the skills to objectively analyse and evaluate a situation.

The good news is that people can be taught these skills, and to an extent be brought in from the dark side ? but of course it?s complicated.
?They?re out to get us? ? or so the theory goes

Conspiracy theories are nothing new, but they have greater reach and intensity with the advent of social media.

As explained by Anthony Lantian, an associate professor of psychology at the Paris Nanterre University and a co-author of the new study: ?Conspiracy theories refer to attempts to explain the ultimate cause of an important event (social, political, climatic, etc.) by accusing a hidden coalition of perceived malicious and powerful people or organisations of having secretly planned and implemented these events.?

For example, there?s a persistent conspiracy theory that shady figures in the US government were complicit in events of 9/11 ? where airliners were flown into the World Trade Centre towers, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania ? and the attacks weren?t simply the work of Islamic terrorists.

The QAnon conspiracy theory of a global Satanic network of pedophiles run by political elites is so widespread and powerful that it led to the election of a true believer, Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, to Congress.

Then, of course, there?s the idea that the COVID-19 pandemic was created on purpose by Chinese scientists (not to be confused with the theory that the coronavirus accidentally escaped a lab in Wuhan).
The answer to all this nuttiness?

The French researchers ran two studies, where they assessed the critical thinking skills of 338 undergraduate students using a French version of a teaching and testing tool known as the Ennis-Weir Critical Thinking Essay Test.

They then scored the students? tendencies towards conspiracy beliefs and their personal assessment of their critical thinking skills.

Critical thinking is the objective analysis and evaluation of a situation ? and requires a number of cognitive skills.

These include the ability to think systematically, see other perspectives, change your mind when new evidence arises, identify relevant versus irrelevant information, identify and discard logical fallacies, be aware of biases and avoid them, and look beyond the obvious.

None of this is particularly easy.

What the researchers found was a strong association between lower critical thinking skills and an increased tendency toward believing conspiracy theories.

This isn?t a new idea ? instead, it persuasively builds on previous research.

A series of studies, written up in one 2014 paper, concluded that teaching analytical thinking can reduce or protect against the adoption of conspiracy theories.

A 2017 study found that analytical thinking could be taught successfully to 10-year-old and 12-year-old children.

Ego and personality tend to resist a change in thinking

It?s wonderful having a cure for dangerous thinking, but how do you get the afflicted to take it up?

A series of experiments in 2016 established a ?robust association? between a need for uniqueness (a person?s need to feel special), a conspiracy mentality, and the endorsement of specific conspiracy beliefs.

In other words, the desire to be seen as unique and special serves as a motivation for conspiracy theorising.

This calls into question the nature of crazy belief. It may be a case that, for some people, ego trumps everything else.

It?s worth considering this when puzzling the apparently self-destructive behaviour of conspiracy celebrities.

Last year, celebrity chef and conspiracy theorist Pete Evans was fired by Channel Ten on the day he was to start filming I?m a Celebrity ? Get Me Out Of Here!

He lost his cookbook publisher, millions of dollars in endorsements and future TV appearances for posting a neo-Nazi symbol on Instagram.

His Facebook and Instagram accounts have since been shut down because of sharing misinformation about the coronavirus.

He?s been fined $80,000 by the TGA for allegedly spruiking dodgy wellness products.

As his reach has dwindled, along with his income, Evans has remained unrepentant.

You might wonder: ?What was he thinking??

https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/science/2021/07/25/conspiracy-theorists-lack-critical-thinking/

Nothing really new here. We already knew Skul and hedge were stupid.
 

REFLOG

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 17, 2002
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I would love to be involved in this type of research and for it to be expanded and carried out worldwide. It would be absolutely interesting to see the results, especially the comparisons between countries.

Peace! :)


Conspiracy theorists lack critical thinking skills: New study

The more people believe in conspiracy theories, the worse they perform on critical thinking tests, a new study has confirmed.

This doesn?t mean that conspiracy theorists are necessarily lacking intelligence, but rather that they lack the skills to objectively analyse and evaluate a situation.

The good news is that people can be taught these skills, and to an extent be brought in from the dark side ? but of course it?s complicated.
?They?re out to get us? ? or so the theory goes

Conspiracy theories are nothing new, but they have greater reach and intensity with the advent of social media.

As explained by Anthony Lantian, an associate professor of psychology at the Paris Nanterre University and a co-author of the new study: ?Conspiracy theories refer to attempts to explain the ultimate cause of an important event (social, political, climatic, etc.) by accusing a hidden coalition of perceived malicious and powerful people or organisations of having secretly planned and implemented these events.?

For example, there?s a persistent conspiracy theory that shady figures in the US government were complicit in events of 9/11 ? where airliners were flown into the World Trade Centre towers, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania ? and the attacks weren?t simply the work of Islamic terrorists.

The QAnon conspiracy theory of a global Satanic network of pedophiles run by political elites is so widespread and powerful that it led to the election of a true believer, Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene, to Congress.

Then, of course, there?s the idea that the COVID-19 pandemic was created on purpose by Chinese scientists (not to be confused with the theory that the coronavirus accidentally escaped a lab in Wuhan).
The answer to all this nuttiness?

The French researchers ran two studies, where they assessed the critical thinking skills of 338 undergraduate students using a French version of a teaching and testing tool known as the Ennis-Weir Critical Thinking Essay Test.

They then scored the students? tendencies towards conspiracy beliefs and their personal assessment of their critical thinking skills.

Critical thinking is the objective analysis and evaluation of a situation ? and requires a number of cognitive skills.

These include the ability to think systematically, see other perspectives, change your mind when new evidence arises, identify relevant versus irrelevant information, identify and discard logical fallacies, be aware of biases and avoid them, and look beyond the obvious.

None of this is particularly easy.

What the researchers found was a strong association between lower critical thinking skills and an increased tendency toward believing conspiracy theories.

This isn?t a new idea ? instead, it persuasively builds on previous research.

A series of studies, written up in one 2014 paper, concluded that teaching analytical thinking can reduce or protect against the adoption of conspiracy theories.

A 2017 study found that analytical thinking could be taught successfully to 10-year-old and 12-year-old children.

Ego and personality tend to resist a change in thinking

It?s wonderful having a cure for dangerous thinking, but how do you get the afflicted to take it up?

A series of experiments in 2016 established a ?robust association? between a need for uniqueness (a person?s need to feel special), a conspiracy mentality, and the endorsement of specific conspiracy beliefs.

In other words, the desire to be seen as unique and special serves as a motivation for conspiracy theorising.

This calls into question the nature of crazy belief. It may be a case that, for some people, ego trumps everything else.

It?s worth considering this when puzzling the apparently self-destructive behaviour of conspiracy celebrities.

Last year, celebrity chef and conspiracy theorist Pete Evans was fired by Channel Ten on the day he was to start filming I?m a Celebrity ? Get Me Out Of Here!

He lost his cookbook publisher, millions of dollars in endorsements and future TV appearances for posting a neo-Nazi symbol on Instagram.

His Facebook and Instagram accounts have since been shut down because of sharing misinformation about the coronavirus.

He?s been fined $80,000 by the TGA for allegedly spruiking dodgy wellness products.

As his reach has dwindled, along with his income, Evans has remained unrepentant.

You might wonder: ?What was he thinking??

https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/science/2021/07/25/conspiracy-theorists-lack-critical-thinking/

LOL another self proclaimed critical thinker....
Unfortunately most critical thinkers lack many things, including a working knowledge of how shit really works
Theory vs practice
Go read a book then perform brain surgery on your spouse or pet
Critical thinker:mj07:
 

WhatsHisNuts

Woke
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Aug 29, 2006
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www.ffrf.org
LOL another self proclaimed critical thinker....
Unfortunately most critical thinkers lack many things, including a working knowledge of how shit really works
Theory vs practice
Go read a book then perform brain surgery on your spouse or pet
Critical thinker:mj07:

Color me shocked. REFLOG doesn?t even understand the concept of thinking critically. :mj07:
 
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ChrryBlstr

Registered User
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Feb 11, 2002
7,407
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Hoosier country
Unfortunately most critical thinkers lack many things, including a working knowledge of how shit really works
Theory vs practice
Go read a book then perform brain surgery on your spouse or pet
Critical thinker:mj07:


Although succinct, this response does not correctly explain the concept of critical thinking. Additionally, the articulation is quite poor.

Final grade = F

Peace! :)
 
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