WHY FACTS DON’T CHANGE OUR MINDS.
WHY FACTS DON’T CHANGE OUR
MINDS
The economist
J.K. Galbraith once wrote, “Faced with a choice between changing one’s mind and
proving there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy with the proof.”
Leo Tolstoy was
even bolder: “The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most
slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest
thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly
persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before
him.”
What's going on
here? Why don't facts change our minds? And why would someone continue to
believe a false or inaccurate idea anyway? How do such behaviors serve us?
THE LOGIC OF
FALSE BELIEFS
Humans need a reasonably
accurate view of the world in order to survive. If your model of reality is
wildly different from the actual world, then you struggle to take effective
actions each day.
However, truth
and accuracy are not the only things that matter to the human mind. Humans also
seem to have a deep desire to belong.
In Atomic Habits, I
wrote, “Humans are herd animals. We want to fit in, to bond with others, and to
earn the respect and approval of our peers. Such inclinations are essential to
our survival. For most of our evolutionary history, our ancestors lived in
tribes. Becoming separated from the tribe—or worse, being cast out—was a death
sentence.”
Understanding
the truth of a situation is important, but so is remaining part of a tribe.
While these two desires often work well together, they occasionally come into
conflict.
In many
circumstances, social connection is actually more helpful to your daily life
than understanding the truth of a particular fact or idea. The Harvard
psychologist Steven Pinker put it this way, “People are embraced or condemned
according to their beliefs, so one function of the mind may be to hold beliefs
that bring the belief-holder the greatest number of allies, protectors, or
disciples, rather than beliefs that are most likely to be true.”
We don't always
believe things because they are correct. Sometimes we believe things because
they make us look good to the people we care about.
I thought Kevin
Simler put it well when he wrote, “If a brain anticipates that it will be
rewarded for adopting a particular belief, it's perfectly happy to do so, and
doesn't much care where the reward comes from — whether it's pragmatic (better
outcomes resulting from better decisions), social (better treatment from one's
peers), or some mix of the two.”
False beliefs
can be useful in a social sense even if they are not useful in a factual sense.
For lack of a better phrase, we might call this approach “factually false, but
socially accurate.” When we have to choose
between the two, people often select friends and family over facts.
This insight
not only explains why we might hold our tongue at a dinner party or look the
other way when our parents say something offensive, but also reveals a better
way to change the minds of others.
FACTS DON'T
CHANGE OUR MINDS. FRIENDSHIP DOES.
Convincing
someone to change their mind is really the process of convincing them to change
their tribe. If they abandon their beliefs, they run the risk of losing social
ties. You can’t expect someone to change their mind if you take away their
community too. You have to give them somewhere to go. Nobody wants their
worldview torn apart if loneliness is the outcome.
The way to
change people’s minds is to become friends with them, to integrate them into
your tribe, to bring them into your circle. Now, they can change their beliefs
without the risk of being abandoned socially.
The British
philosopher Alain de Botton suggests that we simply share meals with those who
disagree with us:
“Sitting down
at a table with a group of strangers has the incomparable and odd benefit of
making it a little more difficult to hate them with impunity. Prejudice and
ethnic strife feed off abstraction. However, the proximity required by a meal –
something about handing dishes around, unfurling napkins at the same moment,
even asking a stranger to pass the salt – disrupts our ability to cling to the
belief that the outsiders who wear unusual clothes and speak in distinctive
accents deserve to be sent home or assaulted. For all the large-scale political
solutions which have been proposed to salve ethnic conflict, there are few more
effective ways to promote tolerance between suspicious neighbours than to force
them to eat supper together.”
Perhaps it is
not difference, but distance that breeds tribalism
and hostility. As proximity increases, so does understanding. I am reminded of
Abraham Lincoln's quote, “I don't like that man. I must get to know him
better.”
Facts don't
change our minds. Friendship does.
THE SPECTRUM OF
BELIEFS
Years ago, Ben
Casnocha mentioned an idea to me that I haven't been able to shake: The people
who are most likely to change our minds are the ones we agree with on 98
percent of topics.
If someone you
know, like, and trust believes a radical idea, you are more likely to give it
merit, weight, or consideration. You already agree with them in most areas of
life. Maybe you should change your mind on this one too. But if someone wildly
different than you proposes the same radical idea, well, it's easy to dismiss
them as a crackpot.
One way to
visualize this distinction is by mapping beliefs on a spectrum. If you divide
this spectrum into 10 units and you find yourself at Position 7, then there is
little sense in trying to convince someone at Position 1. The gap is too wide.
When you're at Position 7, your time is better spent connecting with people who
are at Positions 6 and 8, gradually pulling them in your direction.
The most heated
arguments often occur between people on opposite ends of the spectrum, but the
most frequent learning occurs from people who are nearby. The closer you are to
someone, the more likely it becomes that the one or two beliefs you don't share
will bleed over into your own mind and shape your thinking. The further away an
idea is from your current position, the more likely you are to reject it
outright.
When it comes
to changing people's minds, it is very difficult to jump from one side to
another. You can't jump down the spectrum. You have to slide down it.
Any idea that
is sufficiently different from your current worldview will feel threatening.
And the best place to ponder a threatening idea is in a non-threatening
environment. As a result, books are often a better vehicle for transforming
beliefs than conversations or debates.
In
conversation, people have to carefully consider their status and appearance.
They want to save face and avoid looking stupid. When confronted with an
uncomfortable set of facts, the tendency is often to double down on their current
position rather than publicly admit to being wrong.
Books resolve
this tension. With a book, the conversation takes place inside someone's head
and without the risk of being judged by others. It's easier to be open-minded
when you aren't feeling defensive.
Arguments are
like a full frontal attack on a person's identity. Reading a book is like
slipping the seed of an idea into a person's brain and letting it grow on their
own terms. There's enough wrestling going on in someone's head when they are
overcoming a pre-existing belief. They don't need to wrestle with you too.
WHY FALSE IDEAS
PERSIST
There is
another reason bad ideas continue to live on, which is that people continue to
talk about them.
Silence is
death for any idea. An idea that is never spoken or written down dies with the
person who conceived it. Ideas can only be remembered when they are repeated.
They can only be believed when they are repeated.
I have already
pointed out that people repeat ideas to signal they are part of the same social
group. But here's a crucial point most people miss:
People also
repeat bad ideas when they complain about them. Before you can criticize an
idea, you have to reference that idea. You end up repeating the ideas you’re
hoping people will forget—but, of course, people can’t forget them because you
keep talking about them. The more you repeat a bad idea, the more likely people
are to believe it.
Let's call this
phenomenon Clear's Law of Recurrence: The number of people who
believe an idea is directly proportional to the number of times it has been
repeated during the last year—even if the idea is false.
Each time you
attack a bad idea, you are feeding the very monster you are trying to destroy.
As one Twitter employee wrote, “Every time you retweet or quote tweet someone
you’re angry with, it helps them. It disseminates their BS.
Hell for the ideas you deplore is silence. Have the discipline to give it to
them.”
Your time is
better spent championing good ideas than tearing down bad ones. Don't waste
time explaining why bad ideas are bad. You are simply fanning the flame of
ignorance and stupidity.
The best thing
that can happen to a bad idea is that it is forgotten. The best thing that can
happen to a good idea is that it is shared. It makes me think of Tyler Cowen's
quote, “Spend as little time as possible talking about how other people are
wrong.”
Feed the good
ideas and let bad ideas die of starvation.
THE
INTELLECTUAL SOLDIER
I know what you
might be thinking. “James, are you serious right now? I'm just supposed to let
these idiots get away with this?”
Let me be
clear. I'm not saying it's never useful to point out an error
or criticize a bad idea. But you have to ask yourself, “What is the goal?”
Why do you want
to criticize bad ideas in the first place? Presumably, you want to criticize
bad ideas because you think the world would be better off if fewer people
believed them. In other words, you think the world would improve if people
changed their minds on a few important topics.
If the goal is
to actually change minds, then I don't believe criticizing the other side is
the best approach.
Most people argue
to win, not to learn. As Julia Galef so aptly puts it: people often act like
soldiers rather than scouts. Soldiers are on the intellectual attack, looking
to defeat the people who differ from them. Victory is the operative emotion.
Scouts, meanwhile, are like intellectual explorers, slowly trying to map the
terrain with others. Curiosity is the driving force.
If you want
people to adopt your beliefs, you need to act more like a scout and less like a
soldier. At the center of this approach is a question Tiago Forte poses
beautifully, “Are you willing to not win in order to keep the conversation
going?”
BE KIND FIRST,
BE RIGHT LATER
The brilliant
Japanese writer Haruki Murakami once wrote, “Always remember that to argue, and
win, is to break down the reality of the person you are arguing against. It is
painful to lose your reality, so be kind, even if you are right.”
When we are in
the moment, we can easily forget that the goal is to connect with the other
side, collaborate with them, befriend them, and integrate them into our tribe.
We are so caught up in winning that we forget about connecting. It's easy to
spend your energy labeling people rather than working with them.
The word “kind”
originated from the word “kin.” When you are kind to someone it means you are
treating them like family. This, I think, is a good method for actually
changing someone's mind. Develop a friendship. Share a meal. Gift a book.
Be kind first,
be right later.
article by JAMES
CLEAR
author of “atomic
habits”
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