|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools |
07-20-2009, 04:50 PM | #1 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
"the backfire effect"--us conservatism and the problem of dissonant information
i think this is kinda interesting:
Quote:
you can get to the paper this is a summary of & other stuff cited by chasing the link above. i think the findings here are interesting, but i am not sure about the psychological interpretation that drum basically dismisses either. nor do i think his own interpretation goes quite far enough... i think this is an ideological effect which has the curious effect of making conservative political statements seem non-falsifiable amongst conservatives--at least amongst the group that participated in the study. i think it linked to collective dispositions which are shaped by the way conservative ideology operated---"experts" were assimilated into a cluster of signifiers of persecuting Others, which of course stage conservatives--at least populist conservatives--as Victims. it enables a reprocessing of dissonant information as an aspect of this Persecution, which seems quite central to the construction of conservative identity at the level of how the ideology works in general. contemporary conservatism used a form of identity politics---the device was what a french theorist called interpellation--which refers to the way a sequence of images or statements positions you as a spectator/part of the audience/part of the political demographic. the idea runs that if you find a sequence of statements or images compelling, you typically do so not only on the basis of the content, but also on the basis of how you are placed in relation to others & to the world by them. so it refers to the ways in which statements are (or are not) processed by folk and positions it as a social phenomenon rather than as a psychological one (in the end, it's a mix of both in the way most social phenomena are---if people didn't invest in them psychologically, they wouldn't be particularly social phenomena...but anyway) i think we got to see alot of examples of this effect about in the world during the bush period, and you still see some of it around. it's continuous, happens all the time. but what do you make of this piece? if you have time to look at the paper, what do you make of that? if you accept the argument/analysis, what do you see as it's consequences?
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
|
07-20-2009, 05:22 PM | #2 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
|
Quote:
Calculate into this equation the head-nodding mentality of many liberal and television hosts when it comes to scientific data which support their beliefs, and the ostracizing of any scientific data which opposes it as propaganda, you can quickly find a reason to question what is shown to you. Too many times the media which is to provide us with unbiased knowledge is proven wrong. For every report that comes out incorrect for the right (WMD's in Iraq), you find an equal report which is pure propaganda which is shown to be factual. For example, the photoshopped images of Lebanon and the staged child killings (research the Green Helmet Guy) yet are constantly stonewalled to be factual. The truth is there is no difference in this situation between left and right. It's a mental process we ALL have and ALL use, no matter how opened minded you think you are. It's correlation and multiple categorization the mind develops to make sense of the world. When things don't fit properly, instead of reorganizing your mental grasp of what is reality we mold the new "thing" to merge with what is our proper sense. If Iraq was a good war, and this guy is saying the reason for this good war was an incorrect belief (a belief repeated by Dem & Repub for 10+ years), then something must have occurred to make that true belief appear false.
__________________
"Smite the rocks with the rod of knowledge, and fountains of unstinted wealth will gush forth." - Ashbel Smith as he laid the first cornerstone of the University of Texas |
|
07-20-2009, 05:42 PM | #4 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
|
It's all about the distribution of liberals vs. conservatives in this regard. Just how many liberal conspiracy theorists are there? Does this study reflect on the average conservative? Do conspiracy theorists reflect on the average liberal?
__________________
Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
07-20-2009, 05:58 PM | #5 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Fort Worth, TX
|
Quote:
Quote:
Pot <=======> Kettle
__________________
"Smite the rocks with the rod of knowledge, and fountains of unstinted wealth will gush forth." - Ashbel Smith as he laid the first cornerstone of the University of Texas |
||
07-20-2009, 06:38 PM | #6 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
Quote:
Anyway, the only reason truthers are liberal is because Bush was in office when it happened. If Obama were president on 9/11, you can bet your ass most truthers would be conservatives, the same conservatives now convinced that Barack Obama had a fake birth certificate created in order to bypass section 1 of Article 2. Or that universal healthcare is a first step to the one-world government. Or that FEMA is creating concentration camps. Or that the government is going to take anyone's gun. Edit: In response to the article, it's consistent with what I've experienced. There IS a mistrust of experts and verifiable data growing on the right, and I'm not just imagining things. I've witnessed it first hand, in fact. Last edited by Willravel; 07-20-2009 at 06:41 PM.. |
|
07-20-2009, 06:50 PM | #7 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
my basic contention has for a long time been that there's something particular and kinda curious about contemporary american conservatism as an ideology (worldview in this case)...that it operates with a particular way of staging relations to that worldview one effect of which is a peculiar relation to information. i've been interested in how the discourse works. so i see it as a sociological and political phenomenon. it's obvious that there are variations within any group of people in how investments in that ideology happen, but that doesn't mean that there aren't constants at the level of patterns within the ideology and patterns that are repeated by alot of folk who hold this political position as consumers if you like.
second, i don't know what conservatives are talking about when they refer to the left. typically it is little more than a phantasm, the mirror image of conservatism, something that is constructed politically as an imaginary referencepoint which positions conservatism along some spectrum that apparently has therapeutic value, and which serves to conceal just how peculiar contemporary american conservatism really is. because it provides something to point at and enables the claim "whaddya mean, we're just doing what they're doing" but the fact is that there is no left as conservatives like to imagine it and that conservatism in the states is a peculiar entity. luckily, i don't think it matters so much any more. but it could matter again, so it's good to keep track of just how strange it is.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
07-20-2009, 07:55 PM | #8 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: San Antonio, TX
|
Quote:
From my very non-scientific observation, conservatives are far more prone to 'the crazy' than liberals. o Obama birthers o Global warming deniers o Young earthers (ok, the correlation with evangelical christianity takes care of this one) You get the idea. What left-wing specific reality denial do we have? I disagree with the 9/11 guys being almost completely left-wing, but I could be wrong. |
|
07-20-2009, 08:54 PM | #9 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Indiana
|
Quote:
My point is that some of the left attached itself to the idea of 9/11 being an inside job and blamed the republicans, but the idea stops dead in its track when it shows the left's culpability.
__________________
It's time for the president to hand over his nobel peace prize. |
|
07-20-2009, 09:00 PM | #11 (permalink) |
Lover - Protector - Teacher
Location: Seattle, WA
|
I always find it amusing when people try to "debunk" peer-reviewed studies with anecdotal experience. It's also particularly ironic that presenting this 'expert' research on the matter seems to have had the precisely described affect on those who were already 'convinced' about the "bobble-head" media.
__________________
"I'm typing on a computer of science, which is being sent by science wires to a little science server where you can access it. I'm not typing on a computer of philosophy or religion or whatever other thing you think can be used to understand the universe because they're a poor substitute in the role of understanding the universe which exists independent from ourselves." - Willravel |
07-21-2009, 12:08 AM | #13 (permalink) | |
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
|
Quote:
And it looks like Jinn discovered the self-defending nature of the study's working theory: if you attack it, you probably fit it. How is Limbaugh still on the air with competition like this?
__________________
I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
|
07-21-2009, 07:16 AM | #14 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
|
What I find is that my basic views on a subject are, shall we say, dormant. When I am presented with information that I eventually conclude is b.s. in attempts to refute my basic views, they become accentuated, I get a bit defensive. I look for the holes in the b.s. arguments, I find conflicting information, etc. Fundamentally, I defend my basic views, an exercise in critical thinking in my view, my basic views become stronger or I change them. In most cases they become stronger. I did not need a study to tell you that, all that was needed was for someone to ask.
__________________
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." |
07-21-2009, 07:47 AM | #15 (permalink) | ||
Lover - Protector - Teacher
Location: Seattle, WA
|
Quote:
Quote:
And Levin isn't alone among the pundits, speakers, and Congressman of the so-called "conservative" party.
__________________
"I'm typing on a computer of science, which is being sent by science wires to a little science server where you can access it. I'm not typing on a computer of philosophy or religion or whatever other thing you think can be used to understand the universe because they're a poor substitute in the role of understanding the universe which exists independent from ourselves." - Willravel |
||
07-21-2009, 08:00 AM | #16 (permalink) | |
Darth Papa
Location: Yonder
|
Quote:
In other words, you don't conclude that the contradicting information is BS; you start from there, and your "thinking" and behavior flows from that preconception. I think that's what this study is implying. The "you" in this post IS ace, but is also all of us. I think it's interesting that conservatives seem in this study to show this reaction more strongly than others--that is a surprise to me, because I've always thought of this as a fairly fundamental human being phenomenon. |
|
07-21-2009, 08:16 AM | #17 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
fta:
i thought i made the argument pretty clearly. but you picked out what you wanted to see. this doesn't interest me particularly, nor does the facile logical trick which you followed it with, you know, the one that amounts to "i know you are but what am i?" i am not talking about individuals who happen to be conservative as such---i'm talking about the way the field of conservative discourse operates, how it stages relations to information. that many folk repeat this staging is obvious, just as is the fact that not absolutely everyone who find conservative positions compelling repeats this staging. but that not every last person repeats the particular ways relations to information are staged doesn't mean that therefore there is no staging. it's not that complicated. if you want to debate me, at least make an effort to talk about the same thing.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
07-21-2009, 09:09 AM | #18 (permalink) | |||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
---------- Post added at 10:09 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:07 AM ---------- On there being a lot of Republicans who enjoy strawmen? Sure, I agree with that part. That's about as far as my agreement goes.
__________________
I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
|||
07-21-2009, 09:26 AM | #19 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
so when you talk about this left business, what exactly are you referring to?
this is an organizational and discursive matter so you should be able to point at specifics. and spare me the snippy flourishes.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
07-21-2009, 10:35 AM | #20 (permalink) | |||
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
|
Quote:
You suggest that process is not critical thinking? I disagree. Quote:
Quote:
__________________
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." Last edited by aceventura3; 07-21-2009 at 10:37 AM.. |
|||
07-21-2009, 11:39 AM | #21 (permalink) | |
Darth Papa
Location: Yonder
|
Quote:
|
|
07-21-2009, 11:52 AM | #22 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
Quote:
yes this is self-evidently correct yes it is. personally, i think the data is more interesting than the interpretations offered of it--which is frequently the case. so i floated an alternate riff that i thought erased some of the interpretive problems above. but it substituted different ones. back in the day before it ate itself, the conservative media apparatus was pretty easy to delimit. things got trickier in the dismal period after 9/11/2001 for a while because the ways of framing issues and relations to them particular to that apparatus migrated into the mainstream press, which for all it's problems at least hadn't up to that time adopted the language of the contemporary right. what seems in retrospect to have snapped this was the judith miller business at the ny times, which put the paper's institutional credibility in jeopardy and it was on that basis that the times began to back away from the simple repetition of administration infotainment and the language it was couched in both at the levels of stuff quoted and "analysis"---this ebbing away of conservative discourse from this point accelerated through the second bush term. if you wanted to, you could document the process. the point is that it's much easier to talk about political language that shapes a given socio-cultural space than it is to talk about a collection of individuals who operate within that space---the language gives you something to talk about, it's sources enable you to define a space or region. so i don't particularly think that as human beings conservative folk are more or less rigid than anyone else, really--i suppose there's a segment that is, just as there's a segment of any other population---but the degree to which a political language, once internalized, creates regularities, and that these regularities include particular types of rigidity of thinking---that we can talk about. the problem really is not letting yourself slide off this way of framing things. it's easy to do it if you're motivated to in any event, if you don't like the argument or information. once you slide off, it becomes a matter of political groups who don't like each other's politics calling each other names. there are maybe problems of method in the study as well--but to get there you'd have to read it.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
|
07-21-2009, 12:20 PM | #23 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
|
Quote:
__________________
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." |
|
07-21-2009, 12:26 PM | #24 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
Right, but even that isn't based in reality. All the crap about Saddam pursuing this and that was nothing but bullshit. We got nothing but lie after lie from the Bush administration, and among those lies were things like "chemical weapons" and "yellowcake", all of which have been verified as completely wrong. WE have a track record of deceit, dishonesty, and ruthlessness.
|
07-21-2009, 12:33 PM | #25 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
|
Quote:
---------- Post added at 08:33 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:29 PM ---------- Of course it is not your reality. I accept the fact that different people reach different conclusions (or alternate realities) based on a number of factors. I respect those differences, do you? I would never tell you that things from your view point are not reality after agreeing that we do not and will not see an issue the same way. We know I thought Iraq under Sadaam was a threat and you did not.
__________________
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." |
|
07-21-2009, 12:35 PM | #26 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
Quote:
|
|
07-21-2009, 12:36 PM | #27 (permalink) | |||
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
__________________
I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
|||
07-21-2009, 12:42 PM | #28 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
so what you're telling me, fool them all, is that you got nothing but you don't like what i'm saying.
that's fine. i think we're done now.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
07-21-2009, 12:45 PM | #29 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
|
Wrong.
Using an example: Homsexuality. There is one reality for one group and another reality for the other. Given the same, pardon the pun, stimulus or shall we say input, the responses given those different "realities" will be very different. I believe that if a homosexual was presented with a study that was in conflict with their basic view on sexuality, they may go from an indifferent response to a question to a very opinionated response.
__________________
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." |
07-21-2009, 12:50 PM | #30 (permalink) |
Banned
|
Makes sense to me that conservatives don't trust experts. After all, they still believe that an imaginary backwoods jew had all the answers 2000 years ago and that his ideas tell us how to handle politics, science, education, people relations, sex, and so forth.
Anyone after him who claims different is obviously not an expert, and probably works for the devil. |
07-21-2009, 12:57 PM | #31 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
The only way I'm wrong is it you're moving from politics into physics, in which case one reality would be debatable.
Quote:
|
|
07-21-2009, 01:47 PM | #32 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
Location: Ventura County
|
Speaking for myself, I don't trust anybody, with only a few exceptions.
Quote:
---------- Post added at 09:47 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:16 PM ---------- Quote:
A person who sees potential threats the way you do can not possible understand the reality of the way I see potential threats. I have come to understand our difference. the difference in "reality" molds political views on the subject. When I know how I factor in the implications of taxation in my business decisions, and if perhaps you don't- you may not understand the reality of how tax policy can impact business decisions - then how we have the different perspective when challenging or accepting "reports" that could lead us to very different conclusions based on "reality" even given the same data. People bring who they are and what they have experienced to the table, that in-part defines their reality. As a child I was intrigued by a fact that in different languages some people did not have words for certain concepts that others had words for. In no way does that mean that certain concepts are not real.
__________________
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on lunch." "It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions on vegetarianism while the wolf is of a different opinion." "If you live among wolves you have to act like one." "A lady screams at the mouse but smiles at the wolf. A gentleman is a wolf who sends flowers." Last edited by aceventura3; 07-21-2009 at 01:49 PM.. |
||
07-21-2009, 02:06 PM | #33 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
|
you don't have to get to questions about what "reality" is--hell, i'm not always sure i know and the more i think on it the less i know about what "reality" is and how many of them there are----this is a matter of statements. in the study, you had a series of statements issued by the administration and a series of demonstrations that those statements were false. the problem is the evaluation of these statements--how do you do it? what factors shape that? one way of thinking about that would be to analyze, to the extent that one can, the projections as to the world that each series of statements triggered. another would be to ask about relations toward these statements---that's the route this study went in. what constitutes compelling evidence? what constitutes a convincing argument? what elements or assumptions get introduced that shape these judgments? to what extent can these factors be grouped? once you group them, how to you evaluate that grouping?
like that.
__________________
a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
07-21-2009, 02:40 PM | #34 (permalink) | |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
|
Quote:
__________________
"You have reached Ritual Sacrifice. For goats press one, or say 'goats.'" |
|
07-21-2009, 03:25 PM | #35 (permalink) | |||
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Willravel; 07-21-2009 at 04:23 PM.. Reason: gah, typo |
|||
07-22-2009, 05:35 AM | #39 (permalink) | |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
|
Moderate Republican Congressman Mike Castle was one of only 8 Republicans to vote for the Cap-and-Trade bill. Then he went to a town hall forum in his home district. This is what he encountered:
Quote:
After all, how many chain emails making highly charged and unusual (and usually debunked) political claims have you received that were liberal?
__________________
"You have reached Ritual Sacrifice. For goats press one, or say 'goats.'" |
|
07-22-2009, 05:57 AM | #40 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
|
The more I think of it, the more I'm relieved that Canadian conservatism is an entirely different creature from American conservatism.
I'd rather deal with my Tories, thank you. And to think that these conservatives actually have a legitimate left-wing politics to contend with. You know, elected politicians who are members of parties that float out in left field, with little concern about the centre. We even have sovereigntists sitting in national seats. The way the political spectrum is discussed, I'm assuming many Americans have no idea what it's like up here in the Great White North. It's all really quite fascinating contrasting our two nations. It always has been.
__________________
Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot Last edited by Baraka_Guru; 07-22-2009 at 06:01 AM.. |
Tags |
backfire, conservatism, dissonant, effectus, information, problem |
|
|