Ignorance Is Bliss

Psychological studies confirm Frantz Fanon’s analysis of cognitive dissonance and Morpheus’ explanation to Neo of why people prefer to live in a false reality. But don’t become discouraged. Remember, all change comes from a few determined people. The following is a report from the American Psychological Association.

November 21, 2011

Ignorance Is Bliss When it Comes to Challenging Social Issues

By remaining unaware, people can justify trusting government, study finds

WASHINGTON—The less people know about important complex issues such as the economy, energy consumption and the environment, the more they want to avoid becoming well-informed, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association.

And the more urgent the issue, the more people want to remain unaware, according to a paper published online in APA’s Journal of Personality and Social Psychology®.

“These studies were designed to help understand the so-called ‘ignorance is bliss’ approach to social issues,” said author Steven Shepherd, a graduate student with the University of Waterloo in Ontario. “The findings can assist educators in addressing significant barriers to getting people involved and engaged in social issues.”

Through a series of five studies conducted in 2010 and 2011 with 511 adults in the United States and Canada, the researchers described “a chain reaction from ignorance about a subject to dependence on and trust in the government to deal with the issue.”

In one study, participants who felt most affected by the economic recession avoided information challenging the government’s ability to manage the economy. However, they did not avoid positive information, the study said. This study comprised 197 Americans with a mean age of 35 (111 women and 89 men), who had received complex information about the economy and had answered a question about how the economy is affecting them directly.

To test the links among dependence, trust and avoidance, researchers provided either a complex or simple description of the economy to a group of 58 Canadians, mean age 42, composed of 20 men and 38 women. The participants who received the complex description indicated higher levels of perceived helplessness in getting through the economic downturn, more dependence on and trust in the government to manage the economy, and less desire to learn more about the issue.

“This is despite the fact that, all else equal, one should have less trust in someone to effectively manage something that is more complex,” said co-author Aaron C. Kay, PhD, of Duke University. “Instead, people tend to respond by psychologically ‘outsourcing’ the issue to the government, which in turn causes them to trust and feel more dependent on the government. Ultimately, they avoid learning about the issue because that could shatter their faith in the government.”

Participants who felt unknowledgeable about oil supplies not only avoided negative information about the issue, they became even more reluctant to know more when the issue was urgent, as in an imminent oil shortage in the United States, according the authors. For this study, 163 Americans, with a mean age of 32 (70 men and 93 women), provided their opinion about the complexity of natural resource management and then read a statement declaring the United States has less than 40 years’ worth of oil supplies. Afterward, they answered questions to assess their reluctance to learn more.

“Beyond just downplaying the catastrophic, doomsday aspects to their messages, educators may want to consider explaining issues in ways that make them easily digestible and understandable, with a clear emphasis on local, individual-level causes,” the authors said.

Another two studies found that participants who received complex information about energy sources trusted the government more than those who received simple information. For these studies, researchers questioned 93 (49 men and 44 women) Canadian undergraduate students in two separate groups.

The authors recommended further research to determine how people would react when faced with other important issues such as food safety, national security, health, social inequality, poverty and moral and ethical conflict, as well as under what conditions people tend to respond with increased rather than decreased engagement.

Article: “On the Perpetuation of Ignorance: System Dependence, System Justification, and the Motivated Avoidance of Sociopolitical Information,” Steven Shepherd, University of Waterloo, and Aaron C. Kay, PhD, Duke University, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 120, No. 2.

Steven Shepherd can be contacted by email s2shephe@waterloo.ca
Dr. Aaron Kay can be contacted by phone at (919) 660-3737 or by email aaron.kay@duke.edu
The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the world’s largest association of psychologists. APA’s membership includes more than 154,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.

Find this article at: The American Psychological Association

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5 Comments

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  1. Amerikans choose ingorance because it lets them out of having any responsibility when something bad happens- as in the wars we wage. Their has been a push for decades now among the lower classes to look up to those with advanced degrees and specialized skills as being the ‘decision makers’ and having ‘responsibility’ for those ‘things’. this attitude is greatly encouraged by the controllers and until amerikans take responsiblity for their lives we will continue to see matters like the housing crisis and the ourscourcing of what few jobs are left

    By: tom . April 25, 2012 . 4:45 pm |

  2. What I have personally observed is that many Americans have been programmed from a very early age to simply have trust in their government for matters that like to call as “complex.” The root problem lies in the early stages of psychological development, in which from a very young age many children are self consumed in television, face book, violent video games, sex, drugs, peer pressure, unstable households, dysfunctional parents, sports obsessions, etc. The collision course is quite obvious, and this is further exacerbated by the fact that many Americans just simply do not posses the drive to become well informed and aware of their surroundings. It’s almost like the scientific process is becoming more and more distant in many individuals.

    Moreover, if a matter doesn’t appease Americans they simply refuse to learn about it and easily dismiss it as something they “don’t care about.” This type of mentality is the primary destructive force that gives the “controllers” the leverage they need to further dismantle and dissipate America. The reversibility of such a phenomenon becomes very difficult and challenging–primarily because the people that are giving birth to the new generation are completely clueless of the matrix they live in and simply pass on the same self-destructive instruction to their offspring. The rate of infection of the minds of people is exponential and will only decrease or cease if we re-implant the drive for knowledge, self preservation and the exercise of the scientific process.

    By: Bill . April 29, 2012 . 2:23 pm |

  3. ‘experts’ are put out there by the media on a constant basis, as to the people we need to look to when we have questions or need help. with each passing day society becomes more complex and we are told to ‘specialize’ in one area and to let the ‘experts’, in the other areas lead us. Previous generations didnt need endless amounts of higher education to be able to find jobs or to serve the masters who run the society- general common sense and life experience were enough too live well. Unless we reverse this tide right now when we have a last chance to do so, the prison doors will have been closed on the ussofa forever

    By: tom . April 29, 2012 . 3:41 pm |

  4. Up until recently, there did not exist a penalty (as far as they knew, all relative) for ignoring the down side of reality. WWII came about by natural causes. like everything. Economic cycles just happen.

    For Ward Cleaver and sons Wally and Beaver, the whole world was a sleepy standard US street. This is a luxury that has finally vaporized. The evidence abounds.

    By: Ken Ashley . May 3, 2012 . 4:46 pm |

  5. (from the US) Thank you all for your input. Sometimes when you’re in the middle of the problem (such as I am in the US), you need a “third party” outside the situation to help point out what we can not see. I will continue to share these articles w/my US friends in hope of eyes opening and seeing how deep this control goes. The sad part is most people like it because it lets them live in their own happy little worlds where they feel they are in control of everything.

    By: Teresa . May 6, 2012 . 11:22 am |

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