The Man Who Studies the Spread of Ignorance
How do people or companies with vested interests spread ignorance and
obfuscate knowledge? Georgina Kenyon finds there is a term which defines
this phenomenon.
BBC News | 6 January 2016
In 1979, a secret memo from the tobacco industry was revealed to the
public. Called the Smoking and Health Proposal, and written a decade
earlier by the Brown & Williamson tobacco company, it revealed many
of the tactics employed by big tobacco to counter “anti-cigarette
forces”.
In one of the paper’s most revealing sections, it looks
at how to market cigarettes to the mass public: “Doubt is our product
since it is the best means of competing with the ‘body of fact’ that
exists in the mind of the general public. It is also the means of
establishing a controversy.”
This revelation piqued the interest
of Robert Proctor, a science historian from Stanford University, who
started delving into the practices of tobacco firms and how they had
spread confusion about whether smoking caused cancer.
Proctor had found that the cigarette industry did
not want consumers to know the harms of its product, and it spent
billions obscuring the facts of the health effects of smoking. This
search led him to create a word for the study of deliberate propagation
of ignorance: agnotology.
Agnotology is the study of wilful acts to spread confusion and deceit, usually to sell a product or win favour
It
comes from agnosis, the neoclassical Greek word for ignorance or ‘not
knowing’, and ontology, the branch of metaphysics which deals with the
nature of being. Agnotology is the study of wilful acts to spread
confusion and deceit, usually to sell a product or win favour.
“In looking into agnotology, I discovered
the secret world of classified science, and thought historians should be
giving this more attention.”
The 1969 memo and the tactics used
by the tobacco industry became the perfect example of agnotology,
Proctor says. “Ignorance is not just the not-yet-known, it’s also a
political ploy, a deliberate creation by powerful agents who want you
‘not to know’.”
To help him in his search, Proctor enlisted the
help of UC Berkeley linguist Iain Boal, and together they came up with
the term – the neologism was coined in 1995, although much of Proctor’s
analysis of the phenomenon had occurred in the previous decades.
Balancing act
Agnotology
is as important today as it was back when Proctor studied the tobacco
industry’s obfuscation of facts about cancer and smoking. For example,
politically motivated doubt was sown over US President Barack Obama’s
nationality for many months by opponents until he revealed his birth
certificate in 2011. In another case, some political commentators in
Australia attempted to stoke panic by likening the country’s credit
rating to that of Greece, despite readily available public information
from ratings agencies showing the two economies are very different.
Proctor explains that ignorance can often be
propagated under the guise of balanced debate. For example, the common
idea that there will always be two opposing views does not always result
in a rational conclusion. This was behind how tobacco firms used
science to make their products look harmless, and is used today by
climate change deniers to argue against the scientific evidence.
“This
‘balance routine’ has allowed the cigarette men, or climate deniers
today, to claim that there are two sides to every story, that ‘experts
disagree’ – creating a false picture of the truth, hence ignorance.”
We live in a world of radical ignorance – Robert Proctor
For
example, says Proctor, many of the studies linking carcinogens in
tobacco were conducted in mice initially, and the tobacco industry
responded by saying that studies into mice did not mean that people were
at risk, despite adverse health outcomes in many smokers.
A new era of ignorance
“We
live in a world of radical ignorance, and the marvel is that any kind
of truth cuts through the noise,” says Proctor. Even though knowledge is
‘accessible’, it does not mean it is accessed, he warns.
“Although
for most things this is trivial – like, for example, the boiling point
of mercury – but for bigger questions of political and philosophical
import, the knowledge people have often comes from faith or tradition,
or propaganda, more than anywhere else.”
Proctor found that ignorance spreads when firstly,
many people do not understand a concept or fact and secondly, when
special interest groups – like a commercial firm or a political group –
then work hard to create confusion about an issue. In the case of
ignorance about tobacco and climate change, a scientifically illiterate
society will probably be more susceptible to the tactics used by those
wishing to confuse and cloud the truth.
Consider climate change as
an example. “The fight is not just over the existence of climate
change, it’s over whether God has created the Earth for us to exploit,
whether government has the right to regulate industry, whether
environmentalists should be empowered, and so on. It’s not just about
the facts, it’s about what is imagined to flow from and into such
facts,” says Proctor.
Making up our own minds
Another
academic studying ignorance is David Dunning, from Cornell University.
Dunning warns that the internet is helping propagate ignorance – it is a
place where everyone has a chance to be their own expert, he says,
which makes them prey for powerful interests wishing to deliberately
spread ignorance.
My worry is not that we are losing the ability to make up our own minds, but that it’s becoming too easy to do so – David Dunning
"While some smart people will
profit from all the information now just a click away, many will be
misled into a false sense of expertise. My worry is not that we are
losing the ability to make up our own minds, but that it’s becoming too
easy to do so. We should consult with others much more than we imagine.
Other people may be imperfect as well, but often their opinions go a
long way toward correcting our own imperfections, as our own imperfect
expertise helps to correct their errors,” warns Dunning.
Dunning and Proctor also warn that the wilful spread
of ignorance is rampant throughout the US presidential primaries on
both sides of the political spectrum.
“Donald Trump is the obvious
current example in the US, suggesting easy solutions to followers that
are either unworkable or unconstitutional,” says Dunning.
So while
agnotology may have had its origins in the heyday of the tobacco
industry, today the need for both a word and the study of human
ignorance is as strong as ever.
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