Reasoning about climate change

Author:

Bago Bence12ORCID,Rand David G34ORCID,Pennycook Gordon5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse, University of Toulouse 1—Capitole , 1 esplanade de l’Université, Toulouse 31080 , France

2. Artificial and Natural Intelligence Toulouse Institute, Federal University of Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées , Toulouse 31000 , France

3. Sloan School, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

4. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA 02139 , USA

5. Hill/Levene Schools of Business, University of Regina , Regina, SK S4S 0A2 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Why is disbelief in anthropogenic climate change common despite broad scientific consensus to the contrary? A widely held explanation involves politically motivated (system 2) reasoning: Rather than helping uncover the truth, people use their reasoning abilities to protect their partisan identities and reject beliefs that threaten those identities. Despite the popularity of this account, the evidence supporting it (i) does not account for the fact that partisanship is confounded with prior beliefs about the world and (ii) is entirely correlational with respect to the effect of reasoning. Here, we address these shortcomings by (i) measuring prior beliefs and (ii) experimentally manipulating participants’ extent of reasoning using cognitive load and time pressure while they evaluate arguments for or against anthropogenic global warming. The results provide no support for the politically motivated system 2 reasoning account over other accounts: Engaging in more reasoning led people to have greater coherence between judgments and their prior beliefs about climate change—a process that can be consistent with rational (unbiased) Bayesian reasoning—and did not exacerbate the impact of partisanship once prior beliefs are accounted for.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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