
Guest essay by Eric Worrall
Can psychology help manipulate people into accepting climate alarmism, and adjusting their personal lifestyles? According to The Conversation, the answer might be yes – but people have to believe and trust the information they are given.
The Paris agreement on climate change calls for a global responsibility to cooperate. As we are often reminded, we urgently and drastically need to limit our use of one shared resource – fossil fuels – and its effect on another – the climate. But how realistic is this goal, both for national leaders and for us? Well, psychology may hold some answers.
Psychologists and economists have long explored the conflict between short-term individual and long-term collective interests when dealing with shared resources. Think of the commons dilemma: the scenario in which a field for grazing cattle works well when everyone cooperates by sticking to one cow each, but which leads to the so-called “tragedy of the commons” if more selfish drives take over.
It is useful to think about overuse of fossil fuels and its effect on the climate as a similar dilemma. If we were to think of this from a purely economic perspective, we would likely act selfishly. But psychological research should make us more optimistic about cooperation.
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Social beings
We don’t identify and act just as individuals but as members of social groups. We may belong to a family, a community, a nation and the planet, and behave in ways that benefit the group rather than the individual. A shared group identity (such as identifying yourself as a member of your nation or the local school community) can increase cooperation, especially if we believe that group shares our values about the environment. If you strongly identify with your community you don’t need an incentive to cooperate.
But at what level should this shared identity be emphasised? Emphasising national identity can prevent cooperation between nations, by increasing competition between them. However, this can be used to an advantage, since nations care about their reputation. So perhaps they could compete to be better than others at meeting climate change goals?
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… Big decisions could be facilitated by many of the psychological processes we have described, that focus on global identity, long-term gain rather than short-term loss, intergroup competition and reputation, rewards, shared norms, providing sufficient and clear information, and instilling trust and transparency.
Read more: https://theconversation.com/how-psychology-can-help-us-solve-climate-change-54441
Trust is a huge issue with the climate movement. All the wild predictions which have failed, the sometimes hysterical refusal to release raw data, the often opaque manipulation of data, the shouting down of criticism rather than engagement, the name calling, the threats – not exactly a trust building exercise.
Then of course there is the bizarre refusal on the part of most greens, to embrace options which might actually reduce CO2, such as nuclear power – which in my opinion raises legitimate concerns, that greens care less about CO2, than they care about their political objectives.
There is also the question of whether increased cooperation is actually a good idea. Cooperation might sound warm and fuzzy, but cooperation can be the opposite of freedom. The more people feel compelled to cooperate, to act in a certain way, the less freedom they have to make their own decisions. It doesn’t matter whether that “cooperation” is enforced by fear of consequences, or through more subtle manipulations, such as messages which promote shame, guilt, and peer pressure – either way, people subject to this kind of manipulation lose some of their freedom. Extreme cooperation is sometimes necessary, when society is imperilled by a threat of military invasion, or other imminent disaster; But history is full of stories of societies whose liberty was overturned, when cooperation went too far, when the people traded freedom for unity.
As the famous author Terry Pratchett once wrote, “Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny. Free men pull in all kinds of directions.”.
I once heard about a ‘guess the number of jelly beans in the jar’ competition. There were (lets say) 1345 jelly beans in the jar. Punters to took their guesses ranged from say 150 to 10,000. The mean value of all the guesses was something like 1343.2.
What does that tell you about the value of the large data sample vs the psychology of the various guesses?
Who gives a rats about the psychology? It tells us nothing.
Lies,damned lies and statistics. And then there is psychology the plodding drongo who always brings up the rear.
“It is useful to think about overuse of fossil fuels and its effect on the climate as a similar dilemma”
Useful to whom?
The beed’s Red Button would probably go into instant NGO affiliated activist overload so hardly practical. But wondering how entertaining it would be to have Clive James and young Stephan the Ideationist in a talk show setting for an hour or so. The soap opera nature of it all is fast becoming free entertainment of its own accord. Daily comic strip at the Guardian; free access for all. A game of click bait monopoly broad enough to keep psycho-babble artists in business for years. Not to mention the advertising revenue.
I just saw the following on a climate alarmist site. Won’t mention the name, but what is wrong with this?
“…is giving away a sweepstakes ticket for a 5 day stay in St Maartans for each $25 donation to a charity until Jan. 7th. So give $50 to Climate Talk Radio and you and your honey could be enjoying that Island that you will help save from Climate Change.”
First off, I guess if you take a barf-boat to St. Martin’s island, you might be classified as having a proportionally sized carbon footprint. More to the point, the likely psychological urge for risky behavior, like gambling, is clearly not off-the-table for the likes of climate alarmists.
The real question to ask is who is out of touch with reality.Seems like it is the psychologist themselves who are suffering from psychosis.Or to paraphrase Einstein – the definition of insanity is publishing the same nonsense over and over again and expecting a different reaction.
And the CAGW say I have a mental illness for being a denier. A sure sign of a sick society to believe in something that isn’t true. Eventually, the US will have to have re education camps, for the good of society! for the good of the children! for the good of the planet! for the good of the collective! we have to save the dear leader! The cause of bringing us together is bigger than the issue. Come on comrades! Unite!
What a load of propaganda. Its still a war against a capitalist society. Its Communism sworn enemy.
Why can’t these climate activists prove man made climate change is actually happening in video form, since I’d like to see what it actually looks like when it happens, or is happening.
Climate change causes damage to professions and professional integrity.
Climaphobia. The fear or hate of climate change. Resistance is bigoted.
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I really enjoyed reading this post. I agree with most of your ideas, especially with the word „manipulation”. I saw so much manipulation in this field called „climate change” – from politicians, from different sides of scientists, from the media…. Even COP21 can enter this category, in my opinion, since the people at the conference didn’t took into discussion one of the most important factors in climate change – the oceans.
MAN-MADE CLIMATE CHANGE ADVOCATES? BY STEVE FINNELL
What if man-made climate advocates would have been living for the last six thousand years? Can you imagine?
Exodus 9:23 Moses stretched out his staff toward the sky, and the Lord sent thunder and hail, and fire ran down to the earth. And the Lord rained down hail on the land of Egypt. (NASB)
The headlines in the, “Man-Made Climate Change Egyptian Times,” would have been, Man-Made CO2 emissions caused disaster in Egypt.
Genesis 19:24 Then the Lord rained on Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven, (NASB)
I can hear the man-made climate changers shouting “Made-Made CO2 emissions caused a heat wave, resulting in massive destruction.”
James 5:17 Elijah was a man with a nature like ours, and he prayed earnestly that is would not rain, and it did not rain for three years and six months.(NASB)
Man-made climate advocates more than likely would have called is a drought caused by man-made CO2 emissions.
It is easy to understand how those who do not believe in God could buy into the theory that man has the power to control the weather, however, it is an enigma wrapped in a puzzle as to how those who claim to be Christians can believe that man can control the climate.
YOU ARE INVITED TO FOLLOW MY BLOG. http://steve-finnell.blogspot.com
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