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ESP and Science

A new study has found that people are more likely to accept the possibility of ESP (extra-sensory perception) if it has popular support, regardless of the scientific viewpoint. Additionally, the researchers at the University of Maryland found that people are more likely to disregard science when there is low popular support for the possibility that ESP exists.

In the study, participants watched a videotape which was manipulated to show a person apparently demonstrating ESP. In a 2×2 experimental design, half of the subjects were told that public belief in ESP is high, the other half that public belief is low. Also, half of the participants were told that science rejects the possibility of ESP, while the other half were told that scientists recognize ESP as a possibility:

We found relatively strong evidence that individuals are more likely to accept paranormal claims as true when they believe such claims have popular support. This finding contributes to and extends research that has found significant effects of social influences on belief in the paranormal. We found no effects indicating that science rejecting a claim led individuals to be less likely to believe the claim. In fact, when participants believed that science rejected a claim, they moved in the direction of being more likely to accept the claim as true. This finding ran counter to our expectations but is consistent with findings that trust in science is decreasing. (Click for original PDF)

The researchers concluded that public distrust of science is growing, and the findings “may be due to individuals seeing paranormal belief as a matter of faith rather than evidence and therefore reacting against science.”

On the first point, I find it hard to agree that there is a growing distrust of science in general. I think the opposite in fact. Where there is distrust, I think, is in particular areas. Some of these are where orthodox science is seen to be supporting (or opposing) certain in-grained political or religious points of contention. And some are where orthodox science disparages people’s own viewpoints which they (the people) have arrived at via personal experience – one of which is supposed paranormal experiences such as ESP.

This is reflected in the second point made by the researchers, suggesting the results are due to paranormal belief being a “matter of faith”. I think the opposite – it’s actually through experience, not faith, that belief in ESP arises – and that’s why people react against ‘science’. Being in a minority, and told by an authority figure that your personal opinion (based on experience) is wrong, is generally only going to end up with one result.

One other issue that I think could have a huge bearing on this experiment is the ‘effect size’ of the faked ESP experiment. If it showed someone getting 7 out of 10 cards correct, it would be impressive but still allow for some personal skepticism due to (a) some incorrect guesses and (b) the small sample. If on the other hand, it was 50 out of 50 correct, then you’re not testing people about an issue of faith – it’s like they just witnessed a miracle and they could well be ‘converted’ to a particular viewpoint.

Which brings me to the final point – the irony. A study suggesting there’s a growing distrust of science, which conducts an experiment in which the subjects are lied to in order to judge their beliefs. You’re not helping….

Editor
  1. “A study suggesting there’s a
    “A study suggesting there’s a growing distrust of science, which conducts an experiment in which the subjects are lied to in order to judge their beliefs. You’re not helping….”

    I’m studying undergrad research psychology at the moment, and I had to jump in on this. Outright lying in order to create a scenario in a psych experiment is a really common practise. Sure, you have to take into account the ethics of doing so but deceiving participants through instruction or through using confederates is one of the most widespread procedures used to generate data. It’s sneaky, but it’s also one of the most effective ways of controlling an experiment.

    1. Agreed
      [quote=DFenn]It’s sneaky, but it’s also one of the most effective ways of controlling an experiment.[/quote]

      Oh, for sure. I’m not saying it was wrong. It’s just ironic, and funny, given the goal of the research. The “you’re not helping” comment at the end should be read in a Jon Stewart, high-pitched sing-song voice…
      😉

      1. experimental deception
        I wouldn’t be surprised if the subjects of psychology experiments today are getting wise to this.

        It’s a ruse used all too often, and a very good reason not to use psychology undergraduates as your subjects!

  2. distrust of science, or plain distrust?
    I have been getting the impression that there is a more widespread distrust of authority in recent years. We can see that in the political situation in many countries – voter participation is low, governments are mistrusted, churches are empty.

    For many people, scientific results and knowledge are something imposed on them by governments or other abstract authorities. As they mistrust any abstract authority, so they mistrust science. Not so much because it contradicts much of what they see in daily life, but because it is imposed on them.

    1. I sort of agree with that. I
      I sort of agree with that. I don’t know whether most people can distinguish between governments picking and choosing, as well as politicising science. Science still stands as one of the benchmarks against which governments are judged, which it couldn’t be if it was so corrupt and mistrusted by people.

      I think people have stopped caring. I can’t speak for everyone of course, but for myself i feel a little burnt out. In my early 20’s i was quite political, or at least i cared enough to learn all the differences. Now i just feel so tired, so barraged with information, that i have little inclination to use my spare time to learn. I’m more inclined to spend it with my family.

      This is what i see happening. We have so little free time that what we do have we spend doing other things.

      Science has also been pushed far down the public agenda. Take the current UK election. All we hear about is Economy, economy economy, with public service cuts, jobs jobs jobs, crime crime crime, more public services and then a bit more about the economy. There is no grand vision of the future (except that it would be nice if the economy is good). No dreaming. There has been virtually no talk about science, except to say that the research budgets are under threat.

      The future cost of goods, future production, future energy, future interaction with the planet, solving of food and water shortages, everything is all science, yet we don’t even hear about it. It is so low down the agenda that it is likely to suffer large cuts. Ultimately meaning that we will all suffer more in the future as every material hope that we have is wrapped up in it. And yet all we get is silence, and think tanks wondering how to help create mistrust to generate more profits today.

  3. Popular Support vs Scientific Support
    The ‘popular support for ESP’ effect might reflect trust in ‘experiencers’ (as opposed to ‘experimenters’), rather than some herd instinct. As simple ‘census’ data, it may be easier to interpret, and to trust, than experimental results deriving from some unknown methodology.

    I wonder what ‘evidence’ was supplied? Participants ‘being told’ that science rejects a claim does not equal participants ‘believing that’ science rejects a claim. Perhaps the participants were merely exercising a healthy scepticism – might they have taken what they were told as merely the bias of the individual scientist?

  4. Public support & trust in
    Public support & trust in Science is not being helped by the Anthropogenic Global Warming scam still in progress. Luckily it has suffered numerous damaging setbacks of late, but the politicians still want to ram this down the world’s throat, no matter how silly their tactics get.

    Anyone who respects & loves Science and the Scientific Method should be quite mad at the claims of “scientific consensus” when it comes to belief in Anthropogenic Global Warming; it’s the the kind of issue that make the public say, “See, scientists don’t know what they’re talking about, what does science know…”

  5. Scientists as People Versus Science as Method
    Greg: “I find it hard to agree that there is a growing distrust of science in general.”

    Personally I think the distrust’s in scientists themselves – they’re only people like the rest of us. I remember my late grandmother telling me about a certain doctor she and her friends had. It didn’t matter what they went to him for – sore throats, earaches, headaches, sick stomachs – before they’d have a chance to finish mentioning their symptoms, it was knickers down, breasts out, but she could never quite convince herself doctors were capable of doing anything untoward. Now, though, people’re aware they can be not just crooks and perverts but even serial killers.

    People can also tell the difference between ‘exoneration’ and cliques covering for each other, because they know if their kids were to make similar mistakes in their coursework they’d get at best an F; and if something similar happened in the office or factory where they work people’d be fired on the spot.

    I agree with your second point, too: people’s interest in the paranormal evolves out of anomalous personal experiences.

    I hadn’t seen a friend for six years who told me how, in the interim, she’d voluntarily gone into psychiatric care because of these weird experiences she kept having. Realising the treatment wasn’t working, she asked to go home but they kept changing the subject. Then one day a male nurse took her to one side and told her, “Listen to me: you DON’T want to go home. You absolutely LOVE it here. In fact you love it so MUCH you’d absolutely LOVE it if they’d let you move in PERMANENTLY.” By the end of the morning they’d released her, disillusioned with psychiatry but no longer feeling insane once it occurred to her her experiences mightn’t simply be all in her head after all.

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