Changing Opinions
Posted: Mon May 01, 2017 12:15 am
Since Tahlvin was making me think about this another thread, and this has come up more than a few times both here and elsewhere lately, I'm curious what people think about what actually causes human beings to change their opinions and beliefs. For reasons of ethics, courtesy, and fallibility, I don't usually give harsh criticism to people who disagree with me - and I don't mean here, I mean in day to day life. I tend to tread very gently with people whose opinions I consider flat wrong. That's probably one reason I don't bother much with such things on the internet, though I have tried occasionally to reform - failed, I guess.
The thing is, I don't have any evidence that treading gently with people whose opinions I consider flat wrong is actually helpful in making them change those beliefs. All the evidence I do have is that belief formations and changes and commitments are often irrational processes, and even the rationally-driven ones arise from inner conflict and struggle, which can be very upsetting emotionally. Anecdotally, when I consider beliefs about which I changed my own mind, it never happened because someone was polite and understanding with me. It happened when people said, listen, you're full of shit, and here is why. And at the time I didn't always listen, but if the arguments were good ones, eventually they won. Maybe the jury is still out on other such arguments I haven't accepted yet. But no major beliefs - including religious, political, moral, practical - underwent reversal because I was respected and heard out by my opponents.
Now that we have experienced the fun events of the past year, and the twenty years preceding it, people seem very sincere about this idea that we have to respect our political opponents, and failure to grasp where they're coming from and hear them out and such is the problem. Nah, the problem is that the left eats itself and needs to drive more people to the polls and fight hard against manipulation of our elections. Like Ron is always saying, regardless of what wrongs the other side commits, his side always has the numbers to win and simply does not vote like they should. I don't see the point of being conciliatory. I think people need to own every bit of the bullshit damage they've inflicted on other human beings - they need to see it up close and personal and feel it with their cold hearts until something clicks, e.g. that it's morally heinous to make so many children live in constant fear of being separated from their parents, when they were told for years that everything they were doing was legal. Screeching "ILLEGAL" at these situations is flatly false, and people need to start getting that, and realizing they actively hurt people and are still hurting people, right now, today. It's morally heinous to deprive people of their access to health care, especially in all the cases where it will now amount to pulling the rug out from under people cruelly. I don't see how my patient attempts to understand a bunch of fundamentally racist nonsense will change those minds.
The thing is, I don't have any evidence that treading gently with people whose opinions I consider flat wrong is actually helpful in making them change those beliefs. All the evidence I do have is that belief formations and changes and commitments are often irrational processes, and even the rationally-driven ones arise from inner conflict and struggle, which can be very upsetting emotionally. Anecdotally, when I consider beliefs about which I changed my own mind, it never happened because someone was polite and understanding with me. It happened when people said, listen, you're full of shit, and here is why. And at the time I didn't always listen, but if the arguments were good ones, eventually they won. Maybe the jury is still out on other such arguments I haven't accepted yet. But no major beliefs - including religious, political, moral, practical - underwent reversal because I was respected and heard out by my opponents.
Now that we have experienced the fun events of the past year, and the twenty years preceding it, people seem very sincere about this idea that we have to respect our political opponents, and failure to grasp where they're coming from and hear them out and such is the problem. Nah, the problem is that the left eats itself and needs to drive more people to the polls and fight hard against manipulation of our elections. Like Ron is always saying, regardless of what wrongs the other side commits, his side always has the numbers to win and simply does not vote like they should. I don't see the point of being conciliatory. I think people need to own every bit of the bullshit damage they've inflicted on other human beings - they need to see it up close and personal and feel it with their cold hearts until something clicks, e.g. that it's morally heinous to make so many children live in constant fear of being separated from their parents, when they were told for years that everything they were doing was legal. Screeching "ILLEGAL" at these situations is flatly false, and people need to start getting that, and realizing they actively hurt people and are still hurting people, right now, today. It's morally heinous to deprive people of their access to health care, especially in all the cases where it will now amount to pulling the rug out from under people cruelly. I don't see how my patient attempts to understand a bunch of fundamentally racist nonsense will change those minds.