Affiliation:
1. Department of Leadership and Organizational Behaviour BI Norwegian Business School Oslo Norway
2. Center for Adaptive Rationality Max Plank Institute for Human Development Berlin Germany
3. New York University New York City New York USA
4. Department of Political and Social Sciences Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen Friedrichshafen Germany
Abstract
AbstractFalse beliefs pose significant societal threats, including health risks, political polarization and even violence. In two studies (N = 884) we explored the efficacy of an individual‐based approach to correcting false beliefs. We examined whether the character virtue of intellectual humility (IH)—an appreciation of one's intellectual boundaries—encourages revising one's false beliefs in response to counter‐information. Our research produced encouraging but also mixed findings. Among participants who held false beliefs about the risks of vaccines (Study 1) and the 2020 US Election being rigged (Study 2), those with higher IH explored more information opposing these false beliefs. This exploration of opposing information, in turn, predicted updating away from these inaccurate health and political beliefs. IH did not directly predict updating away from false beliefs, however, suggesting that this effect—if it exists—may not be particularly powerful. Taken together, these results provide moderate support for IH as a character trait that can foster belief revision but, simultaneously, suggest that alternate pathways to combat false beliefs and misinformation may be preferred.
Funder
John Templeton Foundation