How can you change someone's mind? (hint: facts aren't always enough) - Hugo Mercier

2,187,508 views

2018-07-26 ・ TED-Ed


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How can you change someone's mind? (hint: facts aren't always enough) - Hugo Mercier

2,187,508 views ・ 2018-07-26

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
Three people are at a dinner party.
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Paul, who’s married, is looking at Linda.
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Meanwhile, Linda is looking at John, who’s not married.
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Is someone who’s married looking at someone who’s not married?
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Take a moment to think about it.
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Most people answer that there’s not enough information to tell.
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And most people are wrong.
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Linda must be either married or not married—there are no other options.
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So in either scenario, someone married is looking at someone who’s not married.
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When presented with the explanation, most people change their minds
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00:43
and accept the correct answer,
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despite being very confident in their first responses.
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00:48
Now let’s look at another case.
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A 2005 study by Brendan Nyhan and Jason Reifler
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examined American attitudes regarding the justifications for the Iraq War.
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Researchers presented participants with a news article
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that showed no weapons of mass destruction had been found.
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Yet many participants not only continued to believe that WMDs had been found,
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but they even became more convinced of their original views.
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01:14
So why do arguments change people’s minds in some cases and backfire in others?
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Arguments are more convincing when they rest on a good knowledge of the audience,
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taking into account what the audience believes,
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who they trust,
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and what they value.
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Mathematical and logical arguments like the dinner party brainteaser work
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because even when people reach different conclusions,
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they’re starting from the same set of shared beliefs.
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In 1931, a young, unknown mathematician named Kurt Gödel presented a proof
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that a logically complete system of mathematics was impossible.
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Despite upending decades of work by brilliant mathematicians
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like Bertrand Russell and David Hilbert,
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the proof was accepted
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because it relied on axioms that everyone in the field already agreed on.
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Of course, many disagreements involve different beliefs
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that can’t simply be reconciled through logic.
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When these beliefs involve outside information,
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the issue often comes down to what sources and authorities people trust.
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One study asked people to estimate several statistics
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related to the scope of climate change.
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Participants were asked questions,
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such as “how many of the years between 1995 and 2006
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were one of the hottest 12 years since 1850?”
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After providing their answers,
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they were presented with data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
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in this case showing that the answer was 11 of the 12 years.
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Being provided with these reliable statistics from a trusted official source
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made people more likely to accept the reality that the earth is warming.
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Finally, for disagreements that can’t be definitively settled
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with statistics or evidence,
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making a convincing argument
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may depend on engaging the audience’s values.
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For example, researchers have conducted a number of studies
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where they’ve asked people of different political backgrounds
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to rank their values.
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Liberals in these studies, on average, rank fairness—
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here meaning whether everyone is treated in the same way—above loyalty.
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In later studies, researchers attempted to convince liberals
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to support military spending with a variety of arguments.
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Arguments based on fairness—
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like that the military provides employment
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and education to people from disadvantaged backgrounds—
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were more convincing than arguments based on loyalty—
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such as that the military unifies a nation.
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These three elements—
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beliefs, trusted sources, and values—
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may seem like a simple formula for finding agreement and consensus.
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The problem is that our initial inclination is to think of arguments
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that rely on our own beliefs, trusted sources, and values.
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And even when we don’t,
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it can be challenging to correctly identify what’s held dear
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by people who don’t already agree with us.
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The best way to find out is simply to talk to them.
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In the course of discussion,
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you’ll be exposed to counter-arguments and rebuttals.
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These can help you make your own arguments and reasoning more convincing
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and sometimes, you may even end up being the one changing your mind.
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