Saturday, February 8, 2014

Is Climate Change Denial "skepticism"? No, it is "motivated reasoning".


Ostrich 
David Grimes of the Guardian makes a great point that I have personally held for many years.. I am going to post this to more than one class since I do believe that the distinction between "scepticism" and "motivated reasoning" is a fundamental one. GK
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Burying your head in the sand about climate change does not qualify as scientific scepticism.
The grim findings of the IPCC last year reiterated what climatologists have long been telling us: the climate is changing at an unprecedented rate, and we're to blame. Despite the clear scientific consensus, a veritable brigade of self-proclaimed, underinformed armchair experts lurk on comment threads the world over, eager to pour scorn on climate science. Barrages of ad hominem attacks all too often await both the scientists working in climate research and journalists who communicate the research findings.
The nay-sayers insist loudly that they're "climate sceptics", but this is a calculated misnomer – scientific scepticism is the method of investigating whether a particular hypothesis is supported by the evidence. Climate sceptics, by contrast, persist in ignoring empirical evidence that renders their position untenable. This isn't scepticism, it's unadulterated denialism, the very antithesis of critical thought.
Were climate change denialism confined solely to the foaming comment threads of the internet it would be bad enough, but this is not the case – publications such as the Daily Mail, Wall Street Journal and other Murdoch publications give editorial support to this view. Worse still, a depressingly large number of denialists hold office around the world. Australia's Tony Abbot decreed climate change to be "a load of crap", and a sizable chunk of the US Republican Party declare it a fiction. Even in the UK, spending on climate change countermeasures has halved under the environment secretary Owen Paterson, who doubts the reality of anthropogenic climate change, despite the fact the vast majority of scientists say unequivocally that the smoking gun is in our hands.
So given the evidence is so strong against them, then why do these beliefs garner such passionate, vocal support? It's tempting to say the problem is a simple misunderstanding, because increasing average global temperature can have paradoxical and counterintuitive repercussions, such as causing extreme cold snaps. The obvious response to this misunderstanding is to elucidate the scientific details more clearly and more often.
The problem is that the well-meaning and considered approach hinges on the presupposition that the intended audience is always rational, willing to base or change its position on the balance of evidence. However, recent investigations suggests this might be a supposition too far. A study in 2011 found that conservative white males in the US were far more likely than other Americans to deny climate change. Another study found denialism in the UK was more common among politically conservative individuals with traditional values. A series of investigations published last year by Prof Stephan Lewandowsky and his colleagues – including one with the fantastic title, Nasa Faked the Moon Landing – Therefore, (Climate) Science Is a Hoax: An Anatomy of the Motivated Rejection of Science – found that while subjects subscribing to conspiracist thought tended to reject all scientific propositions they encountered, those with strong traits of conservatism or pronounced free-market world views only tended to reject scientific findings with regulatory implications.
It should be no surprise that the voters and politicians opposed to climate change tend to be of a conservative bent, keen to support free-market ideology. This is part of a phenomenon known as motivated reasoning, where instead of evidence being evaluated critically, it is deliberately interpreted in such a way as to reaffirm a pre-existing belief, demanding impossibly stringent examination of unwelcome evidence while accepting uncritically even the flimsiest information that suits one's needs.
The great psychologist Leon Festinger observed in 1956 that "a man with a conviction is a hard man to change. Tell him you disagree and he turns away. Show him facts or figures and he questions your sources. Appeal to logic and he fails to see your point." This is the essence of the problem, and sadly, Festinger's words ring true today: the conviction of humans is all too often impervious to the very evidence in front of them.
Motivated reasoning is not solely the preserve of conservatives. While nuclear power has been recognised by the IPCC as important in reducing carbon dioxide emissions, staunch and uninformed opposition to nuclear power arises often from the liberal aisle. In the furore over the Fukushima nuclear disaster (which has claimed no lives and probably never will) many environmentalists lost sight of the fact that it was a natural disaster, very possibly exacerbated by climate change, that cost thousands of lives. Instead, they've rushed to condemn nuclear power plants.
Angela Merkel's decision to cut nuclear power stations was celebrated by Green activists, but this victory was utterly pyrrhic as they were replaced by heavily polluting coal plants. Nor could it be considered a health victory, as while nuclear power kills virtually no one, 1.3 million people a year die as a result of pollution from coal-burning plants.
Greenpeace remains stubbornly opposed to even considering nuclear power, and has said it is simply too dangerous claiming a figure of over 200,000 deaths and hugely increased incidence of cancers due to the Chernobyl disaster, a statistic exposed as an utter shambles by the journal Radiation Protection Dosimetry.
The health effects of Chernobyl have been well studied over 25 years by the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation: 28 workers died from acute radiation syndrome, and there were 15 fatal thyroid cancers in children. Those who ingested radioiodine immediately after the disaster are at elevated risk of thyroid cancer. No increase has been observed in solid cancers or birth defects.
That this toll is considerably less than people might expect does not take away from the tragedy, but highlights the fact that motivated reasoning occurs on all sides.
The problem is that a vital discussion on a scientific issue can be hijacked as a proxy for deep-seated ideological differences. Depressingly, increasing communication of science merely tends to harden existing opinion. Part of the solution may be to take into consideration the values that impede meaningful progress; there is some evidence that climate change denialists become less hostile when given options which do not obviously threaten their world view.
If the facts of the matter inspire an emotional threat reaction, perhaps this can be mitigated by framing it as something not incompatible to one's world view. A free-market advocate, for example, might respond better to an argument outlining the economic cost of climate change or the fact inaction has a higher price tag than action.
Nor is there any inherent contradiction in an environmentalist being in favour of nuclear power – George Monbiot, Mark Lynas and James Lovelock have written eloquently on the importance of nuclear power in mitigating the ravages of climate change.
If we truly wish to avoid catastrophe, we must be pragmatic and take action. Ideological differences need to take a back seat if decisive action is to be taken. When one's house is on fire, the immediate priority should be putting the flames out, not squabbling about the insurance. Let us hope we realise this before it's too late.

18 comments:

  1. I agree with the author of this article that motivated reasoning is in fact a major obstacle in acting against climate change. I wonder why conservative white males in the United States deny climate change? And who do conservative white males and politically conservative individuals think is responsible for climate change? These are questions I wish was answered by the author of this article. Using motivated reasoning to reconfirm your existing belief that climate change isn't happening is a denial of the reality of climate change and impairs action that is urgently needed from being started.

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  2. The author of this article has highlighted the phenomena I has been witnessing across controversial Facebook status updates for years now: now that the internet, specifically internet comment sections with an anonymous option, has become the main platform for discussion, people are more and more likely to fall into the trap of motivated reasoning. It appears it is easier to disregard small internet comments than it is to brush off discussion points made in a physical conversation, it is easier to say hateful / irrelevant / illogical things which derail from the main point over the internet than it is in face to face conversation, and it is easier to close out of a window or a tab than it is to walk away from someone with whom one is engaged in deep discussion with. With the increasing amount of information available to us today, we are able to educate ourselves more efficiently, but not necessarily more effectively, as it is much easier to get lost in it all and to feel overwhelmed. This overwhelming feeling can lead, in many people, to feeling threatened, which often causes a negative reaction and completely destroys any relevance or logic her or she might have seen in the argument. It's like a panic switch. So yes, motivated reasoning is 100% a hinderance to attempts to be more proactive and educated about the effects of climate change...just as it has hindered progress in the areas of many hot button issues (gay marriage, legalization of marijuana, immigration, etc). It takes a lot of self control and self awareness to separate one's deeply rooted ideologies from the facts / arguments being presented. Not everyone is capable (this is how Fox News continues to thrive!), but the only option is to continue with urgency in spreading information about the reality of climate change, and to do so in a friendly, but firm manner. You cannot fight denial with anger or frustration, but must persistently be open to questioning, knowledgeable about the facts, and willing to take time to explain (and re-explain, and re-explain, and re-explain) why it should be relevant to every person. Still, many times one will be met with opposition and will get nothing...no "converted soul." But one must keep trying.

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    1. Hello Cheyne. Yes motivated reasoning is a big hinderance to be more proactive about climate change. If people are using the facts and information presented to them about climate change to deny that climate change is happening then they are missing the picture that climate change is real and is having drastic effects on our environment. I really do hope that we don't get caught with our heads in the clouds when drastic changes start to occur in the environment.

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    2. Nicholas,

      "I really do hope that we don't get caught with our heads in the clouds when drastic changes start to occur in the environment."

      Unfortunately, I think it's a little too late for that. We already have seen such a surge in natural disasters due to climate change, and yet many people still doubt the relevance / accuracy of scientific reports about the effects of climate change. I have become a bit pessimistic (some would label it pessimistic, however I say it's closer to realistic) about the future of our planet. I believe our fear of change (i.e. the fear that the switch to green economics would cause too many job losses / be too costly / be too much work / etc) will hinder our progress to such an extent that, ultimately, by the time we are not only willing, but able to make a change, it will be too late. In fact, I think it already is.

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  3. I am a conservative (white) male, as are many of my friends, and the first things I want to get out of the way is that most of us do not deny the human aspect of climate change. It can be clearly seen. We enjoy nature and rely on it through farming, hunting, fishing, and general relaxation. In fact, many people I know have chosen to look into greener energy sources for their homes because they are proving to be cheaper in the long run (but that's their specific circumstance and choice). However, skepticism is merely the act of questioning. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, scientific racism was a field widely agreed upon by scientists of various disciplines. They turned out to be wrong. But to me, the main problem is when someone like Cheyne Romero says that the fear green economics "would cause many jobs/ be too costly" is merely a fear of change. People in this country, especially in the current economy, cannot risk losing a job or having more expenses or regulations put on them. Their first priority is caring for their family and making sure they're fed today and tomorrow, and not what the world may be like in 100 years. People work day in and day out and a minor change might be the last straw that puts them under. That's the reality. They'll cozy up to green energy sources and climate-safe practices when others prove to them that these are better.

    So called green policies have also backfired, which is another reason skeptics have issues. One example is Obama's ethanol policy which requires corn ethanol to be blended with gasoline. Farmers took this as an opportunity to make money off of the government promoted market for corn. They moved into millions of acres of prairie land and portions of land previously set aside for conservation. Animal habitats were destroyed, water sources were filled in, and even more trapped CO2 was released from the soil when soils were tossed. Furthermore, fertilizers were used and caused even more damage. This was all reported by the Associated Press (hardly a conservative agency) in Nov. 2013. Another example is Wind Turbines killing already endangered bird populations including the Bald Eagle. Finally, NY state anti-logging policies, combined with natural wildfire combat, have filled up the trees in forest to unnatural levels. Shrubbery on the ground doesn't receive sunlight and excess deer populations are now starving.

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    1. Hello Eric,

      Although you and your group of friends, made up of largely the same demographic, do not deny the cause / effects of climate change, this does not mean all members of your demographic are in agreement with you. In fact, your sample size is so, so, so small, it is really irrelevant and has no statistical value. In fact, the linked article to the 2011 study has a sample size gathered in surveys for nearly 10 years! The study makes note that,

      "Furthermore, the results of our multivariate logistic regression models reveal that the conservative white male effect remains significant when controlling for the direct effects of political ideology, race, and gender as well as the effects of nine control variables. We thus conclude that the unique views of conservative white males contribute significantly to the high level of climate change denial in the United States."

      So you can see why ten years of research, a sizable sample, and controls for nine variables has a little more weight and validity to it than you, one white conservative male, arguing that you and your other white conservative male friends believe in it, so everyone in your demographic must as well! One must avoid applying personal experience to one's demographic as a whole, it is neither accurate nor useful.

      Skepticism is the act of questioning...to a point. As the article says, "...skepticism is the method of investigating whether a particular hypothesis is supported by the evidence. Climate sceptics, by contrast, persist in ignoring empirical evidence that renders their position untenable." Furthermore, I hardly think comparing scientific racism, which might as well be the number one example of ideas / beliefs being fueled by motivated reasoning, to climate change is a valid comparison. Why compare a "science" (if you can even call it that) from a century ago that finds its roots in racism to one that has actual empirical evidence that is well documented and repeatedly so? It seems frivolous, and doesn't illustrate any real point?

      You argue that, "People in this country, especially in the current economy, cannot risk losing a job or having more expenses or regulations put on them. Their first priority is caring for their family and making sure they're fed today and tomorrow, and not what the world may be like in 100 years." But that is exactly the problem! If we don't start worrying about our environment now, and taking steps to combat against all the damage we've already done it, then when? It will keep getting pushed aside, but the reality is it is important, and it is our top priority. Your short-term thinking is the actually the main problem here. That's the reality. You argue that we need to concentrate on the right now, and not the future, however "By depleting the world’s stock of natural wealth – often irreversibly – this pattern of development and growth has had detrimental impacts on the well- being of CURRENT generations and presents tremendous risks and challenges for the FUTURE."

      Yes, some green policies have backfired. But so have many non-green policies. That is the nature of government. It is impossible to predict every negative side effect that may or may not occur. There will be a lag (many lags!), and you can't expect perfection. But this does not mean individuals should wait around to "...cozy up to green energy sources and climate-safe practices when others prove to them that these are better." It means we should continue to be proactive in greening the economy, while adjusting for all the bumps and roadblocks we will face along the way. I understand our economy is in a tight spot now, and many people are working hard and struggling to get by. But all of their struggles will mean nothing if we are ruining our planet in the process. A destroyed economy is temporary (relatively speaking!), and though it will cause great suffering, it is nothing compared to the destruction of our planet. That is the true end all.

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    2. Cheyne,
      What I always find funny is how people always want the "other guy" to choose, or even be forced, to change his/her lifestyle "for the greater good." Yet, few people usually want to volunteer completely. I don't know what your personal life is like, but I'm curious if you would really be willing to lose your job right now and risk your family? Most individual employees don't strive to work for, for example, oil companies or coal mines. They work there because it's the best option for them. Like I said before, if you want people to change, you have to make it worth their while right now. Electric cars, for example, are gaining popularity not because of global warming, but because people are sick of paying for gas and that electric cars are starting to look, refuel, and drive better. The more you try to force something onto people, the more likely they are to fight and deny it.

      Even environmentalists refuse to change if it's not worth their while. Take a look at public figures like Al Gore and Harrison Ford who warn about global warming, yet they won't part from their private jets and general lifestyles which have the carbon footprint of dozens of average Americans. Take a look at non-conservative NYC which pumps out tens of millions of metric tons of CO2 a year. Don't you think it's worse to completely believe in man made climate change and yet continuously live a polluting lifestyle in a polluting city? Bloomberg, a big climate change advocate, preferred to kick hundreds or thousands of people out of their homes to build a sporting arena in Brooklyn instead of protecting the city from what he believed was an inevitability: rising water levels.

      In regards to your point on scientific racism, you only say that because today we know it was ridiculous. Yet, at the time, people all over the world saw that as genuine science (with its own forms of "evidence" like the measurement of skulls). They used it for their own personal achievements, much like many people are making money off of the environmentalist movement (including the government which can put a tax on CO2 emissions), and many scientists would bandwagon with the general consensus out of fear of being ostracized.

      Finally, I also think it is important for better communication of the message. One thing, for example, is the idea that in the last 3000 years, Earth has experienced quite a few dramatic shifts in temperature. One example is during the Middle Ages when rising temps essentially turned Mongolia into a barren wasteland and resulted in the Mongol Invasion of China. Then there was volcanic activity and an ice age. I'm sure scientists can reconcile these things, and it is up to them to do it in more effective ways than to simply tell people that their observation is that the temperature has increased since 1850 and that they must change their entire way of life because of it...160 years in nothing.

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    3. Eric. I hear where you're coming from in terms of people losing their jobs and not be able to provide for their family. But we have to take heed to the damaging conditions we are forcing on the environment. Yes there will be job losses but a green economy would more than make up for those job losses. We have to take this risk and move to a green economy instead of keep doing what we've been doing. The way we have been degrading the environment and depleting the world's natural resources needs to be stopped and a more sustainable way needs to be found to satisfy our needs for energy and other resources. I have to agree with Cheyne on this one.
      Perhaps Al Gore can find a manufacturer that makes planes in a more sustainable manner if he wants to continue his private jet. I do agree with you Eric that people make the push for a Green Economy yet they don't want to be the first ones to make the change over to a green economy. I think that this is an lifestyle issue as people want to maintain comfortable lives and may not want to give up their aspects of their comfortable lives.

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  4. I really like the article. The author was spot on in their analysis that there is no such thing as global warming skeptics. In order for them to be skeptics, they have to be conducting or have conducted research defending their position. However, if any research was conducted, they would find that global warming or climate change is very real. They are ignorant rather than skeptical. I have also been trying to use the term climate change instead of global warming. That's because people who might be less informed mistake a cold snap for evidence that global warming is a sham. Overall, the earth is warming, the polar icecaps are melting, and the sea levels are rising. But certain areas can experience colder weather, or a snow storm, much like the polar vortex that has been in the news recently.

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  5. I agree with the author of this article. Motivated reasoning, in my opinion, sounds like a form of ignorance that is enthused by individual selfishness to support ones own agenda. It comes with the price of forgoing the benefits mankind has gained from scientific advancements and logical thought and reason. The evidence of global warming is compelling and all point to climate change. If the individuals who deny this phenomenon took the time to understand what climatologists have long been telling us regarding the contradictory effects, such as cold snaps, this “misunderstanding” would possibly be reduced. I once watched a documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth” that touches on the subject of those in denial while also providing me with interesting details on the effects of climate change and global warming. It was the first time I started to care about the repercussions it has on our generation and future ones to come. It is hard for me to understand how people can reject years of scientific support, facts and research when there are resources and so many ways to answer the questions of those who seek to discredit and deny many credible climatologists and scientists. I was also shocked to hear about the authors mentioning of conservative white males in the U.S. being far more likely to deny climate change, I would have liked more details on his studies.

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  6. This article brought up a lot of interesting points, and I think that David Grimes was able to perfectly articulate what many people, myself included, have tried to say when challenged about the validity of global climate change. Personally, I have not had the chance to talk with someone who considers themselves a "climate skeptic". However when I talk to friends about climate change and mention that there are still people that challenge the idea, they're often really surprised. Reading articles or blogs written by people who challenge the idea that climate change is real, happening, and that we are responsible for the acceleration of the phenomena is often really frustrating for me. I'm often left without being able to properly articulate a decent argument, but in this essay Grimes really hit it out of the park. "The nay-sayers insist loudly that they're "climate sceptics", but this is a calculated misnomer – scientific scepticism is the method of investigating whether a particular hypothesis is supported by the evidence. Climate sceptics, by contrast, persist in ignoring empirical evidence that renders their position untenable. This isn't scepticism, it's unadulterated denialism, the very antithesis of critical thought".
    Anther point brought up in the essay that really stuck with me was when he talked about events such as the Fukushima nuclear disaster, and how often people fail to realize that it is actually a natural disaster. I think that in events like this, it is easy to want to have someone to blame for what has happened, and in the case of Fukushima nuclear energy as a whole ended up being blamed. Grimes said that we failed to see that this disaster was actually a natural disaster that occurred because we have accelerated climate change so much that we can expect events like this to happen more and more frequently. Grimes seems to be looking at the bigger picture, which is what "climate skeptics" need to start doing as well. If we don't accept that what we're doing is hurting not only the environment, but also people now and in the future, we are essentially accepting the fact that we will soon live in a world where these natural disasters are the new norm.

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  7. “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.” I think this

    quote by George Orwell is indicative of how people shun the truth

    because they don’t want to face it. Anything that challenges their

    beliefs and takes them out of their comfort zone is immediately put

    down. Climate Change is as real as it can be; we are living through

    the consequences of it right now.

    I firmly believe that because people do not have enough

    knowledge they can’t comprehend the drastic changes brought to us

    by the weather because of us. It is essential that liberals and

    conservatives both try to put aside their differences and come up with

    a strategy to help Earth. To try to heal is from all the injuries we have

    inflicted upon it.

    The scientists need to approach both the parties and make

    them understand in their own terms that Climate Change is not a

    theory, it’s a fact. I agree with the article that we must find out a way

    to deliver the information in a manner that doesn’t contradict anyone

    traditional values. That is not our aim; our aim is to save Earth and

    our future generations. Well-informed and substantial decisions need

    to be made, and the first step is to get everyone to understand what

    is exactly going on, provide persuasive information and take actions.

    Maybe pride comes in the way too, but that needs to be put aside to

    face the problems us humans have started and save the Earth from

    the catastrophe we brought and the consequence of which are

    nature catastrophes we have and will face unless we take the

    initiative to inform and take action. Amina Ahmed

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  8. I think that motivated reasoning is definitely behind many peoples dis-beliefs about climate change. It really is a good way to try to diminish the validity of the theory of climate change, but it is not done for environmental purposes. I can definitely see why conservative people who wish for more of a Laissez Faire governmental approach would denounce climate change. The possible effects of the acceptance of climate change, could be more stringent business guidelines and laws. To conservatives, this could also be considered an act against capitalism. This essay brings up many good points as to why people would hold the position of denial. But, if we don't do something soon, our environment will suffer to the point where it may be irreversible, and political affiliation will do nothing to diminish the facts at that point.

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  9. I think this is a great eye-opening article that addresses the differences between motivated reasoning and skepticism. I believe that a large portion of the population uses motivated reasoning to support their opinions, and this is why relatively little has been done to hinder climate change. It frustrates me when people refuse to believe in the concept of climate change and our role in it, when there has been enough scientific evidence to support this theory. At the same time, this article does a great job of pointing out how environmentalists, including myself, may also use motivated reasoning to support biased ideas, citing the opposition to nuclear power. I think one of the main reasons why it is so tough to achieve climate change goals is because both supporters and opponents of the climate change theory are so hell-bent on proving that their argument is the right one that they refuse to even open up their minds and understand the opposite side's views. They refuse to believe scientific evidence, and they use motivated reasoning to support their own theories. We need to keep an objective point of view about the issue and accept the scientific evidence that is being presented, rather than refusing to believe in it or manipulating it to support our own beliefs. We need to compromise and address the climate changeissue and scientific evidence so that both sides will be willing to listen and understand. Otherwise, we will never be able to solve anything and people will continue fighting over which theory is the right one as the environment continues to get worse, and in the end, we are not only harming our environment but ourselves. But, of course, this is easier said than done.

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  10. This article publicized a very important truth a lot of citizens tend to miss, the undeniable truth about our very own climate. This article highlighted keys such which politicians seem to miss pointing to our demised of our climate. Without conduction research of their own, their opinion should not be value but yet some how it is. We must find out a way to deliver the information in a way that doesn’t over step boundaries such as anyone traditional values. We all have the same goal, which is to help preserve the environment for many generations to come. I believe this is something we are all missing, we are trying to achieve the same goal but have different believes on how to get there.

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  11. Climate change is such a sensitive and controversial topic due to the age we live in. The media has spun the topic out of the world (literally), and we are stuck with Al Gore and his opinion. I am not in denial. I accept the fact that our extreme weather patterns are connected to the rising ocean tides. The sun, moon, and stars are nothing without each other. I've been living since 1990. Since I can remember, our summers are hotter than hell and winters leave us frozen under the thermometer, and they continue to get worse. This has to be due to climate change. Behind the denial lies…the truth. It is both; some are motivated and some are doubting, but it is clear that one political group favors the truth over the other. I agree with the above post that we are all trying to achieve the same goal but have different ways to get there. In reality, there are facts by scientists that confirm that the arctic is melting. Climate Change is such a broad and vague topic. I could pick up a piece of grass from the ground, that's Climate Change right? Until we narrow down what it is, we will never be able to identify what true Climate Change really is. So no, it is "motivated reasoning."

    Abraham Alvi

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  12. I really like the article because of how it separates the two terms “Skepticism” and “Motivated reasoning”. I also agree with the author’s point of view that “Motivation Reasoning” is what individuals use to examine the concept of climate change. I however believe that it is a little too late because governments/ political individuals are more focus on running the country in general; making profits, health insurance, increase minimum wage which is good. Government officials are not that focus on nature, the planet Earth itself and what is happening to it. I think that government officials fear that moving towards green economy would cause a lot of spending and will eventually lead to a loss of jobs. Going green would have a both positive and negative effects on its people and the world, therefore I think that’s what their fear it so they give it a “blind eye”. I also think that religion (Christianity) plays a role in this matter, back then there was B.C (before Christ) that was how many years ago and things has change a lot since. But it is stated in the Bible that there is going to be the Apocalypse which is an era of mass destruction, a lot of natural disasters before “God” returns to take over his land, so that could be a reason why people refuse to take climate change serious because they know that the Apocalypse is predicted to happen.

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  13. In my opinion motivated reasoning is a form of ignorance, and the lack of knowledge or accepting the truth on climate change. This article brought up lots of points that state the truth about climate change that people don’t want to believe. Climate change has been such a controversial topic lately mainly because there are people that seem to deny it or state it’s a “load of crap” meanwhile there is enough scientific evidence that climate change is happening mainly on how humans treat the planet. I believe it’s a challenge to achieve any of the climate change goals because of so many people denying it and the scientific evidence behind it and then using their own motivated reasoning to support their view. Somehow we need to find middle and bring the supporters and the opponents together and work a compromise on how to go about this controversial topic. Both sides need to be open and willing to hear one another to go about doing something and narrow it down to what really climate change is.

    Monika Stanczyk

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