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Morally offensive scientific findings activate cognitive chicanery

  • Cory J. Clark*
  • , Nicholas Kerry
  • , Maja Graso
  • , Philip E. Tetlock
  • *Corresponding author voor dit werk

    OnderzoeksoutputAcademicpeer review

    2 Citaten (Scopus)
    3 Downloads (Pure)

    Samenvatting

    We document a mutually reinforcing set of belief-system defenses—cognitive chicanery—that transform “morally wrong” scientific claims into “empirically wrong” claims. Five experiments (four preregistered, N = 7040) show that when participants read identical abstracts that varied only in the sociomoral desirability of the conclusions, morally offended participants were likelier to (1) dismiss the writing as incomprehensible (motivated confusion); (2) deny the empirical status of the research question (motivated postmodernism); (3) endorse claims inspired by Schopenhauer's stratagems (The Art of Being Right) and the Central Intelligence Agency's (CIA's) strategies for citizen-saboteurs; and (4) endorse a set of contradictory complaints, including that sample sizes are too small and that anecdotes are more informative than data, that the researchers are both unintelligent and crafty manipulators, and that the findings are both preposterous and old news. These patterns are consistent with motivated cognition, in which individuals seize on easy strategies for neutralizing disturbing knowledge claims, minimizing the need to update beliefs. All strategies were activated at once, in a sort of belief-system “overkill” that ensures avoidance of unfortunate epistemic discoveries. Future research should expand on this set of strategies and explore how their deployment may undermine the pursuit of knowledge.

    Originele taal-2English
    Pagina's (van-tot)148-164
    Aantal pagina's17
    TijdschriftAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
    Volume1552
    Nummer van het tijdschrift1
    Vroegere onlinedatum10-sep.-2025
    DOI's
    StatusPublished - okt.-2025

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