Bastiaan T. Rutjen’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Conspiracy beliefs and science rejection
  • Literature Review

June 2022

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33 Reads

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36 Citations

Current Opinion in Psychology

Bastiaan T. Rutjen

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We review recent work on the relationship between science rejection and conspiracy beliefs. We distinguish between conspiracy beliefs about science specifically and the link between general conspiracist worldviews and science rejection. The first imply the scientific community as the center of a conspiratorial endeavor to misrepresent scientific findings. We outline several potential contributors to these beliefs: science is a social enterprise; its policy implications can clash with deeply held personal beliefs; science is inherently uncertain. Second, more general conspiracist thinking and worldviews also contribute to science rejection, for example in the domains of climate change, vaccination and genetic modification. This could be exacerbated by several cognitive biases associated with conspiratorial thinking. Finally, we briefly review pathways to curb (conspiratorial) science rejection.

Citations (1)


... For example, science's fraught historical relationship with racism, its role in perpetuating racialized forms of knowledge production, sustaining racial paradigms 29 and disregarding ethical canons by experimenting on non-white human subjects 30 , has reduced research participation in some populations 31 . Furthermore, the epistemic authority of science and scientists has been challenged by misinformation and disinformation 32,33 , a "reproducibility crisis" 34 , conspiracy theories 35,36 and science-related populist attitudes 37,38 . Science-related populism has been conceptualized as a perceived antagonism between 'the ordinary people' and common sense on one side and academic elites and scientific expertise on the other 37 . ...

Reference:

Trust in scientists and their role in society across 68 countries
Conspiracy beliefs and science rejection
  • Citing Article
  • June 2022

Current Opinion in Psychology