What They Don't Tell You About Conspiracy Theories: Genius-Driven Science and Editor-Free Preference Predict Susceptibility to Conspiracy Beliefs
Michele d'Errico and
Taha Yasseri
No yfmve, OSF Preprints from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
Conspiracy beliefs can negatively impact personal health, democratic engagement, and intergroup relationships. Pop-science communication often uses narrative elements such as mystery, chance, twists, and hero-journey-like narratives to make its contents more palatable. In this way, a specific conception of scientific progress is promoted: in the beginning, everyone is wrong and blinded by prejudice; the genius arrives with the exact solution; this is mocked or considered insane until everyone realizes that he was right from the beginning. We hypothesized that a genius-driven view of science and a preference for editor-free information could influence conspiracy beliefs. To evaluate this, we administered a 104-item questionnaire to 843 U.S. residents. Genius mentality and editor-free preference significantly predicted firmer conspiracy beliefs, while trust in science and scientists were strong negative predictors. Importantly, genius mentality moderated the relationship between trust in science and conspiracy belief. Editor-free preference moderated the relationship between education and genius mentality. These findings suggest that genius mentality and editor-free preference influence the perception of science by promoting trust in figures isolated from the mainstream scientific community. The resulting worldview could lead to overestimating the influence individuals or small groups can have on complex social systems directly influencing conspiracy beliefs.
Date: 2024-12-02
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:osfxxx:yfmve
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/yfmve
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