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A neuroscientist explains why Christian evangelicals are hardwired to believe Donald Trump’s lies

President Donald Trump lies so often that it is no longer shocking when it happens, no matter how blatant or absurd the falsehood may be. Not only does Trump regularly exaggerate the truth, he frequently denies facts that can be observed directly from video or audio tapes. This has led some professionals to diagnose his lying as compulsive or pathological, and many psychologists have pointed out that he is constantly gaslighting his base—a term that refers to a strategic attempt to get others to question their direct experience of reality.

With so much evidence to contradict his claims, like having the largest inauguration crowd size despite pictures clearly showing otherwise, one must wonder how there are still people out there who believe anything the man says. But the fact of the matter is there are many who swallow it hook, line, and sinker. Most of his fervent supporters are convinced that Trump is the harbinger of truth when it comes to important issues like climate change—which is really just a “hoax perpetrated by the Chinese government”.

While this might sound laughable, it is a serious problem, as it has contributed to fake news and dangerous propaganda running rampant. Given its negative impact on society, it is important to understand why certain groups of people are more vulnerable to believing unsupported lies than others. For this, we must look to science for answers, and fortunately, the fields of psychology and neuroscience offer valuable insight.

One reason Trump supporters believe his lies comes from a basic fact about the brain: it takes more mental effort to reject an idea as false than to accept it as true. In other words, it’s easier to believe than to not.

This fact is based on a landmark study published in the journal PLOS ONE in 2009, which asked the simple question, how is the brain activated differently during a state of belief compared to a state of disbelief? To test this, participants were asked whether or not they believed in a series of statements while their brain activity was being imaged by an fMRI scanner. Some sentences were simple and fact-based (California is larger than Rhode Island), while others were more abstract and subjective (God probably does not exist). The results showed the activation of distinct but often overlapping brain areas in the belief and disbelief conditions. While these imaging results are complicated to interpret, the electrical patterns also showed something that was fairly straightforward. Overall, there was greater brain activation that persisted for longer during states of disbelief. Greater brain activation requires more cognitive resources, of which there is a limited supply. What these findings show is that the mental process of believing is simply less work for the brain, and therefore often favored. The default state of the human brain is to accept what we are told, because doubt takes effort. Belief, on the other hand, comes easily.

This troubling finding makes sense from an evolutionary standpoint. If children questioned every single fact they were being taught, learning would occur at a rate so slow that it would be a hindrance. But this fact could be just as easily applied to both the political left and right. So how does it explain why conservatives, specifically evangelicals, are so easily duped by Donald Trump?

For Christian fundamentalists, being taught to suppress critical thinking begins at a very early age. It is the combination of the brain’s vulnerability to believing unsupported facts and aggressive indoctrination that create the perfect storm for gullibility. Due to the brain’s neuroplasticity, or ability to be sculpted by lived experiences, evangelicals literally become hardwired to believe far-fetched statements.

This wiring begins when they are first taught to accept Biblical stories not as metaphors for living life practically and purposefully, but as objective truth. Mystical explanations for natural events train young minds to not demand evidence for beliefs. As a result, the neural pathways that promote healthy skepticism and rational thought are not properly developed. This inevitably leads to a greater susceptibility to lying and gaslighting by manipulative politicians, and greater suggestibility in general.

If we want to combat the brain’s habit of taking the path of least resistance, which has destructive downstream consequences for critical thinking, as a society we must place more value on empirical evidence, and this must be reflected in how we educate our youth. Additionally, we must create an awareness of the fact that for the human mind, believing is more of a reflex than a careful and methodical action.

Bobby Azarian is a neuroscientist affiliated with George Mason University and a freelance journalist. His research has been published in journals such as Cognition & Emotion and Human Brain Mapping, and he has written for The New York Times, The Atlantic, Psychology Today, and Scientific American. Follow him @BobbyAzarian.

Full Article: [alternet.org]

nogod4me 8 Dec 30
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So basically what is being said is that people are lazy. Duh, in one way or another we are all lazy. Look at the number of people who get mad when a doctor tells them they need to lose weight or stop smoking. All they want is a pill. Sometimes thinking goes to dangerous territory and that is questioning the dogma of your tribe. No one wants to start controversy within their group and it takes strength and a willingness to maybe even being wrong. It's simply too easy to coerce people into some action or inaction (like praying within a sports team or not standing for the pledge) than to promote individuality. The US model was supposed to be 'the squeaky wheel gets the grease but it seems we are starting to adopt the Chinese motto, 'the protruding nail gets hammered down'.

The fanatic has no resources in themselves, so they do not question those they accept as an authority.
Show a watch to a primitive and they might think it's magic, show it to a watchmaker and the watchmaker could show the primitive how it works.

"The fanatic is perpetually incomplete and insecure. He cannot generate self-assurance out of his individual resources -- out of his rejected self -- but finds it only by clinging passionately to whatever support he happens to embrace. This passionate attachment is the essence of his blind devotion and religiosity, and he sees in it the source of all virtue and strength.... He easily sees himself as the supporter and defender of the holy cause to which he clings. And he is ready to sacrifice his life." Eric Hoffer, author of "The True Believer"

@nogod4me Totally agree with one small caveat; he/she does not want to question. My late partner's first husband had a severe inferiority complex. When younger he had heard his parents lament why they had these damn children. He handled his inferiority complex by bring others down especially his wife. He was so locked into that behavior he couldn't see how it was what it was (sounds like our faux leader - make himself feel good by bringing others down). However, some people can and do change. Sometimes it just takes planting seeds. Lucky for myself and my siblings, we had loving but clueless parents and we lived in totally free range lifestyle. We learned by doing and lots of mistakes were made as well as successes.

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excellent. thank you.

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Yes. It has also been described in the past as. False positives have a lower price in evolutionary terms than false negatives.

Metaphorically. If I think I see an eye looking at me out of the woods and I run and hide, should it prove to be false, all I loose is the time and energy taken to hide behind a tree. If on the other I do not hide and it really is a tiger, I loose my life. Therefore since situation like that are common, it is thought evolution conditions us to favour false positives, in other words not to be sceptical.

I really like what you‘ve written. Concise, well said

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