This story was originally published by ProPublica.
Stephan Lewandowsky studies the way people think, and in particular, why they engage in conspiracy theories.
So when the cognitive scientist from England’s University of Bristol observes wild speculation related to the COVID-19 pandemic, he sees how it fits into the historical pattern of misinformation and fake news.
I recently wrote about the viral video “Plandemic” as an investigative reporter assessing the range of unsubstantiated COVID-19 allegations put forth by a controversial researcher.
Lewandowsky comes at the video and others like it from a science-based perspective. He is one of the authors of “The Conspiracy Theory Handbook,” which explains the traits of conspiratorial thinking.
Conspiracy theories related to the COVID-19 pandemic seem to be proliferating, and some may even be taking root.
So I asked Lewandowsky to share how he identifies and understands them, and what we can do to sort through the confusion. The interview has been condensed for clarity and length.
What’s the difference between a real conspiracy and a conspiracy theory?
A real conspiracy actually exists, and it is usually uncovered by journalists, whistleblowers, document dumps from a corporation or government, or it’s discovered by a government agency. The Volkswagen emissions scandal, for example, was discovered by conventional ways when some engineers discovered an anomaly in a report.
It was all mundane — normal people having normal observations based on data. They said, “Hang on, something’s funny here,” and then it unraveled. The same is true for the Iran-contra scandal. That broke via a newspaper in Lebanon. True conspiracies are often uncovered through the media. In Watergate, it was journalists not taking “no” for an answer.
A conspiracy theory, on the other hand, is discussed at length on the internet by people who are not bona fide journalists or government officials or whistleblowers in an organization or investigative committees of regulators.
They’re completely independent sources, individuals who self-nominate and put themselves forward as being in possession of the truth. In principle, that could be true. But then if you look at the way these people think and talk and communicate, you discover their cognition is different from what I would call conventional cognition.
What are some differences between conventional and conspiratorial thinking?
You can start with healthy skepticism vs. overriding suspicion. As a scientist, I’m obviously skeptical. I’m questioning anything people say. I look at my own data and other people’s data with a skeptical eye.
But after skeptics have been skeptical, they are quite capable of accepting evidence. Once something has withstood scrutiny, you accept it. Otherwise you’re in a state of complete nihilism and you can’t believe anything.
That crucial second step of acceptance is absent in conspiracy theorists. That is where conspiracy theorists are different. Their skepticism is a bottomless, never-ending pit of skepticism about anything related to the official account.
And that skepticism is accompanied by extreme gullibility to anything related to the conspiracy. It’s an imbalance between skepticism for anything an official may say and complete gullibility for something some random dude on the internet will tweet out. It’s that imbalance that differentiates conspiracy thinking from standard cognition.
Conspiracy thinking is immune to evidence. In the “Plandemic” video, the absence of evidence is twisted to be seen to be as evidence for the theory. They say the cover-up is so perfect that you will never find out about it. That’s the opposite of rational thinking.
Usually when you think of a hypothesis, you think of the evidence. And if there’s zero evidence, you give it up or say there is no evidence for it.
Conspiracy theorists may also simultaneously believe things that are contradictory. In the “Plandemic” video, for example, they say COVID-19 both came from a Wuhan lab and that we’re all infected with the disease from vaccinations. They’re making both claims, and they don’t hang together.
More generally, conspiracy theorists show this contradictory thinking by presenting themselves as both victims and heroes. They see themselves as these heroes in possession of the truth.
But they also see themselves as victims. They feel they are being persecuted by this evil establishment or the deep state or whatever it is.
Why do you think some conspiracy theories are so popular?
Some people find comfort in resorting to a conspiracy theory whenever they have a sense of a loss of control or they’re confronted with a major adverse event that no one has control over.
So every time there’s a mass shooting in the US, I can guarantee you ahead of time that there will be a conspiracy theory about it.
So you would expect conspiracy theories related to the pandemic. That doesn’t make them any less harmful. Here in the United Kingdom, people are burning 5G cell towers because of this extreme idea that 5G has something to do with causing COVID-19. More than 70 cell towers have gone up in flames because of this conspiracy theory.
Is conspiracy thinking at an all time high?
Historical records show that there were rampant conspiracy theories going on in the Middle Ages when the plague hit Europe. It was anti-Semitism at the time. That tends to be part and parcel of pandemics. People engage in conspiracies that involve some sort of “othering” of people.
During previous pandemics, people chased doctors down the street because they thought they were responsible for the pandemic. In Europe, now a lot of antagonism is directed at Asians, because the pandemic started in China. The internet is helping the spread of conspiracy theories. It’s much easier now than it was 30 years ago. But it’s difficult to say we have more now.
Are conservatives or liberals any more likely to engage in conspiracy thinking?
There is a lot of research on this and political conspiracy theories tend to be most associated with extreme political views, on the right or the left. But if you quantify it, you frequently find more on the right than the left.
How do we talk to the conspiracy theorists in our lives?
It’s extremely difficult. In terms of strategy, the best people to talk to are people who are not conspiracy theorists. The vast majority of people are grateful for the debunking and responsive to it. That should be your target of communication if you have a choice.
The hardcore conspiracy theorists are unlikely to change their minds. They will take what you say and display considerable ingenuity in twisting it and using it against you. On Twitter, I block them immediately because I’m concerned about my ability to have a rational conversation and I don’t want others to violate that right.
How do we prevent the spread of conspiracy theories?
By trying to inoculate the public against them. Telling the public ahead of time: Look, there are people who believe these conspiracy theories. They invent this stuff. When they invent it they exhibit these characteristics of misguided cognition.
You can go through the traits we mention in our handbook, like incoherence, immunity to evidence, overriding suspicion and connecting random dots into a pattern. The best thing to do is tell the public how they can spot conspiracy theories and how they can protect themselves.
Are you aware of any cases where the conspiracy theorists turned out to be right?
There are tens of thousands of conspiracy theories out there, so I haven’t checked them all. But if you look at actual conspiracies, Volkswagen, Iran-contra, Watergate — the real conspiracies — they were uncovered by conventional cognition.
There weren’t people there who took the absence of evidence to be evidence for the theory, or who reinterpreted contrary evidence to somehow support their theory. I’m not aware of any conspiracy theorists discovering something where they turn out to be correct.
A good example of a “conspiracy theory” turning out to be entirely valid was the Hillsborough disaster involving fans of Liverpool FC in 1989. The families of the 96 victims were very much considered a minority fringe view when taken against the police blaming hooliganism for the disaster rather than their own substantial failings in managing the crowd.
The eventual discovery of wide-scale doctoring of evidence by police and medics was complete vindication for the families.
Bloody Sunday in Derry – denied for 40yrs that troops fired on unarmed protestors?
Shoot to Kill policy by NI police B Specials & British Army?
Gulf of Tonkin?
Reichstag fire?
Belgian babies on bayonets?
Never mind where to stop, where to begin?
ALL reported and promulgated by soi disant bona fide journalists.
BTW, when does a psychologist come to be, self defined, as a scientist?
To quote Alan Moore, “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 Iluminati, or The Jewish Banking Conspiracy, or the Gray Alien Theory.
The truth is far more frightening – Nobody is in control. The world is rudderless.”
The government spying on citizens with satellites was a favourite, but the Snowden leaks pretty much backed it up. Was the conspiracy fuelled by people in the know? Or did the conspiracy predate the PRISM project Snowden leaked?
And here I am thinking that whoever created COVID-19 would be exposed when they activate the virus through satellites to take control of infected people to overturn governments. Only then would we know whether it was created by the US military-industrial powers or Chinese communists. But now it looks like that the Nazi poison gas manufacturers like Bayer will take control of the world through their Covid-19 vaccines.
The big risk is that we might all end up believing that Dutton’s proposals, McKenzie’s sports rorts, Morrisson’s incompetence are just all conspiracies, fake!
The problem is not recognising the difference between a ‘conspiracy theory’ (as meant here) and a genuine conspiracy. It’s of no great importance that a small number of the hardest core CT’s will ‘never’ be convinced by any amount of countering evidence. They are very rarely dangerous on a large scale now, for all our (slightly contrived, frankly) anxious noise about neo-Nazis, global banking cabalists, illuminati nuts, and yes, even pedo pizzagate aficionados. Not pleasant, sure, often scary on an individual, atomised level…but usually mostly self-neutralising by their extreme, often pantomime, absurdity.
The real problem with ‘conspiracy theory’ theorising is that its primary role now is in providing spoiler or blocking cover for open criticism/opposition of plain old corruption, criminal activity, systemic greed and ruthless self-interest. There’s not a single grubby public act or activity now that doesn’t sooner or later defend itself by cynical resort to accusations of ‘conspiracy theorising’. Politics is drenched in the trope: Trump’s entire presidency, Morrison’s government, climate change paralysis, Brexit, bushfires…any criticism of any aspects of this is just ‘conspiracy theorising’. (AKA ‘canberra bubble obsession’, ‘swamp fake news’, ‘meeja lies’ etc.)
Bluntly? Plenty of our politics now…IS conspiracy based.. Look up the
word in the dictionary. ‘Noun:
a secret plan by a group to do something unlawful or harmful.’ Is anyone seriously thinking there aren’t any of these in play, in contemporary politics or corporate activity? Angus Taylor’s fake document, SportsRort, the coordinated anti-‘carbon tax’ campaign, Turnbull’s ouster and Tim Wilson’s franked dividend travelling ‘committee’ were surely ALL ‘secret plans by a group to do something unlawful or harmful.’
“The real problem with ‘conspiracy theory’ theorising is that its primary role now is in providing spoiler or blocking cover for open criticism/opposition of plain old corruption, criminal activity, systemic greed and ruthless self-interest. There’s not a single grubby public act or activity now that doesn’t sooner or later defend itself by cynical resort to accusations of ‘conspiracy theorising’.”
That about sums it up Jack. If a certain group wants to hide something just arrange for the usual suspect popular news groups to tell their readers it’s all a conspiracy and it’s job done. ..or.. attack the messenger and label them conspiracy theorists and that’s job done too. Recently BK devoted a whole article to convince his readers and probably even himself that’s conspiracy theorists are all nutters……know what I reckon? I reckon BK is a secret CT.
PS Jack.
Not sure about them there CT’s you mentioned all being “absurd”..anyway, you missed one. The Pearl Harbor CT and the ensuing cover up.