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November 07, 2014

Study finds that when people don't like the political implications of the solution to a problem, they are more likely to deny the problem exists at all.

There may be a scientific answer for why conservatives and liberals disagree so vehemently over the existence of issues like climate change and specific types of crime.

A new study from Duke University finds that people will evaluate scientific evidence based on whether they view its policy implications as politically desirable. If they don't, then they tend to deny the problem even exists.

“Logically, the proposed solution to a problem, such as an increase in government regulation or an extension of the free market, should not influence one’s belief in the problem. However, we find it does,” said co-author Troy Campbell, a Ph.D. candidate at Duke's Fuqua School of Business. “The cure can be more immediately threatening than the problem.”

The study, "Solution Aversion: On the Relation Between Ideology and Motivated Disbelief," appears in the November issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (viewable at http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/psp/107/5/809/).

The researchers conducted three experiments (with samples ranging from 120 to 188 participants) on three different issues -- climate change, air pollution that harms lungs, and crime.
 
“The goal was to test, in a scientifically controlled manner, the question: Does the desirability of a solution affect beliefs in the existence of the associated problem? In other words, does what we call 'solution aversion' exist?" Campbell said.
 
"We found the answer is yes. And we found it occurs in response to some of the most common solutions for popularly discussed problems." 

For climate change, the researchers conducted an experiment to examine why more Republicans than Democrats seem to deny its existence, despite strong scientific evidence that supports it.
 
One explanation, they found, may have more to do with conservatives' general opposition to the most popular solution -- increasing government regulation -- than with any difference in fear of the climate change problem itself, as some have proposed.

Participants in the experiment, including both self-identified Republicans and Democrats, read a statement asserting that global temperatures will rise 3.2 degrees in the 21st century. They were then asked to evaluate a proposed policy solution to address the warming.
 
When the policy solution emphasized a tax on carbon emissions or some other form of government regulation, which is generally opposed by Republican ideology, only 22 percent of Republicans said they believed the temperatures would rise at least as much as indicated by the scientific statement they read.
 
But when the proposed policy solution emphasized the free market, such as with innovative green technology, 55 percent of Republicans agreed with the scientific statement.
 
For Democrats, the same experiment recorded no difference in their belief, regardless of the proposed solution to climate change.

"Recognizing this effect is helpful because it allows researchers to predict not just what problems people will deny, but who will likely deny each problem,” said co-author Aaron Kay, an associate professor at Fuqua. “The more threatening a solution is to a person, the more likely that person is to deny the problem.”
 
The researchers found liberal-leaning individuals exhibited a similar aversion to solutions they viewed as politically undesirable in an experiment involving violent home break-ins. When the proposed solution called for looser versus tighter gun-control laws, those with more liberal gun-control ideologies were more likely to downplay the frequency of violent home break-ins.
  
"We should not just view some people or group as anti-science, anti-fact or hyper-scared of any problems," Kay said. "Instead, we should understand that certain problems have particular solutions that threaten some people and groups more than others. When we realize this, we understand those who deny the problem more and we improve our ability to better communicate with them."

Campbell added that solution aversion can help explain why political divides become so divisive and intractable.

 

Source today.duke.edu

7 comments:

  1. Americans let in BUSH Jr. and we got MORE WAR, RACISM, DEPRESSION & POVERTY than ever before in the nation's history. Now the GOP will bleed this half-dead nation DRY!

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  2. It's amazing how many hayseeds continue to believe commercial airliners hit the WTC TT.
    Alum can't cut structural steel at subsonic speed(STP@SL).

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  3. Did you have a desire to post this comment to an article without regard to the article's content?

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  4. Listen Einstein, it was the jet fuel from the jumbo jets that compromised the steel. But if you're anti-facts then I could see why you'd ignore such information because it doesn't fit your fantasy.

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  5. Ok hank, since you like to belittle people, how does jet fuel turn steel into dust, as well as create molten lava from basement support beams that burned for months. Fucking moron.youre the one in fantasy land. Wake up you putz, war has been declared on you and the rest of humanity, by these psychopathic rulers and mis-leaders.

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  6. "Jet fuel" is nothing but a HYDROCARBON, and without FORCED INDUCTION hydrocarbon fires CAN NOT get hot enough to weaken basic steel, let alone structural steel. Bellows were invented by BLACKSMITHS to get coal fires (which burn much hotter than "jet fuel") hot enough to work iron w/ a maul. You are one of those HAYSEEDS making a HUGE leap in logic, assuming aluminum can cut trough structural steel at such low velocity. SHOW AN EXAMPLE OF HOW YOUR HAYSEED PHYSICS WORKS, FORREST GUMP. Where is there any REPEATABLE PHYSICAL evidence of this EVER happening.

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  7. Zenny, you whine about me belittling people yet you turn around and call me a "fucking moron." You are a moronic hypocrite.

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