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词条 True-believer syndrome
释义

  1. Psychology

  2. Examples

     M. Lamar Keene and "Raoul"  José Alvarez and "Carlos"  Marian Keech and "Clarion"  Harold Camping's 2011 end times prediction 

  3. See also

  4. References

     Notes  Bibliography  Further reading 
True-believer syndrome is an informal or rhetorical term used by M. Lamar Keene in his 1976 book The Psychic Mafia. Keene used the term to refer to people who continued to believe in a paranormal event or phenomenon even after it had been proven to have been staged.[1][2] Keene considered it to be a cognitive disorder,[3][4] and regarded it as being a key factor in the success of many psychic mediums.[2]

The term "true believer" was used earlier by Eric Hoffer in his 1951 book The True Believer to describe the psychological roots of fanatical groups.

Psychology

In an article published in Skeptical Inquirer, psychologist Matthew J. Sharps and his colleagues analyze and dissect the psychology of True Believers and their behavior after the predicted apocalypse fails to happen. Using the 2012 Mayan apocalypse prophecy as example, and citing several other similar cases, Sharps contributes four psychological factors that compel these people to continue their belief (or even stronger belief) despite the conflicted reality.[5]

  • Subclinical dissociative tendencies: While not suffering from mental illness, people with subclinical dissociative tendencies have a higher inclination to experience disconnection with immediate physical reality and propensity to see highly improbable things with enhanced credulity. Such subclinical dissociation is usually associated with paranormal thinking.[5]
  • Cognitive dissonance: The more one invests in a belief, the more value one will place in this belief and, as a consequence, be more resistant to facts, evidence or reality that contradict this belief. Some of the True Believers in the Keech case in the example below had left their spouses, jobs and given up their possessions to prepare to board the alien spacecraft. When the world did not end, cognitive dissonance-reducing activity (belief disconfirmation response) provided an enhancement of their beliefs and outlet for their heavy investment and discomfort in front of reality.[8][5]
  • Gestalt processing: In the continuum in human information processing, people with Gestalt processing will consider a concept without detailed analysis (as opposed to feature-intensive thinking) and accept the idea as a whole relatively uncritically. Sharps suggests a relationship between dissociative tendencies and gestalt processing. People who incline to believe paranormal activities will be more likely to credulously entertain the ancient Mayan prophecies whose details most people know little about.[5]
  • Availability heuristic: Under the mental shortcut of availability heuristic, people place more importance and give more weight to a belief when examples related to the idea are more readily recalled, most often because they are recent information and latest news.[6] The information of Mayan prophecies has been abundantly available, especially in the media, before the expected apocalyptic date. People's judgments tend to bias toward this latest news, particularly those with dissociative tendency toward supernatural and favor gestalt processing.[5]

Examples

M. Lamar Keene and "Raoul"

In his book The Psychic Mafia, Keene told of his partner, a psychic medium named "Raoul" in the book. Some in their congregation still believed that Raoul was genuine even after he openly admitted that he was a fake. Keene wrote "I knew how easy it was to make people believe a lie, but I didn't expect the same people, confronted with the lie, would choose it over the truth. ... No amount of logic can shatter a faith consciously based on a lie."[1][7]

José Alvarez and "Carlos"

According to The Skeptic's Dictionary, an example of this syndrome is evidenced by an event in 1988 when stage magician James Randi, at the request of an Australian news program, coached stage performer José Alvarez to pretend he was channelling a two-thousand-year-old spirit named "Carlos". Even after it was revealed to be a fictional character created by Randi and Alvarez, many people continued to believe that "Carlos" was real.[4] Randi commented: "no amount of evidence, no matter how good it is or how much there is of it, is ever going to convince the true believer to the contrary."[8]

Marian Keech and "Clarion"

In the book When Prophecy Fails, Festinger and his colleagues observed a fringe group led by "Marian Keech" (researchers' pseudonym) who believed that the world would be destroyed on December 21, 1954 and the true believers would be rescued by aliens on a spaceship to a fictional planet, Clarion. When nothing happened, the group believed that their devotion convinced God to spare the world and they became even more feverish in proselytizing their belief. This is one of the first cases that led Festinger to form the theory of cognitive dissonance.[9]

Harold Camping's 2011 end times prediction

{{Main|2011 end times prediction}}

American Christian radio host Harold Camping claimed that the Rapture and Judgment Day would take place on May 21, 2011,[10][11] and that the end of the world would take place five months later on October 21, 2011, based on adding the 153 fish of John 20 to May 21.[12][13] Camping, who was then president of the Family Radio Christian network, claimed the Bible as his source and said May 21 would be the date of the Rapture and the day of judgment "beyond the shadow of a doubt".[14] Camping suggested that it would occur at 6 pm local time, with the Rapture sweeping the globe time zone by time zone,[15][16] while some of his supporters claimed that around 200 million people (approximately 3% of the world's population) would be 'raptured'.[17] Camping had previously claimed that the Rapture would occur in September 1994. Following the failure of the prediction, media attention shifted to the response from Camping and his followers. On May 23, Camping amended that May 21 had been a "spiritual" day of judgment, and that the physical Rapture would occur on October 21, 2011, simultaneously with the destruction of the universe by God.[18][19] However, on October 16, Camping admitted to an interviewer that he did not know when the end would come,[20] and made no public comment after October 21 passed without his predicted apocalypse.[21]

See also

{{Portal|Psychology}}{{col-begin}}{{col-break}}
  • Belief perseverance
  • Cognitive dissonance
  • Confirmation bias
  • Conspiracy theory
  • Critical thinking
  • Delusion
  • Denialism
  • Disconfirmed expectancy
{{col-break|gap=4em}}
  • Escalation of commitment
  • Fanaticism
  • List of cognitive biases
  • Magical thinking
  • Partisan (political)
  • Superstition
  • "Viruses of the Mind" (essay)
  • Wishful thinking
{{col-end}}

References

Notes

1. ^Keene, Lamar M. (1976). The Psychic Mafia. St. Martin's Press; New York
2. ^Keene and Spragett, p.151
3. ^{{cite book |author=Davis, W. Sumer |title=Just Smoke and Mirrors: Religion, Fear and Superstition in Our Modern World |isbn=978-0-595-26523-7 |pages= 11–12|year=2003 }}
4. ^{{cite web |url=http://skepdic.com/truebeliever.html |title=true believer syndrome |accessdate= 2007-08-19 |work=Skeptic's Dictionary}}
5. ^{{cite journal|last1=Sharps|first1=Matthew|last2=Liao|first2=Schuyler|last3=Herrera|first3=Megan|title=Remembrance of Apocalypse Past|journal=Skeptical Inquirer|volume=38|issue=6|pages=54–58|year=2014|url=http://www.csicop.org/si/show/remembrance_of_apocalypse_past/}}
6. ^{{cite journal|last1=Tversky|first1=Amos|last2=Kahneman|first2=Daniel|title=Availability: A heuristic for judging frequency and probability|journal=Cognitive Psychology|volume=5|issue=2|year=1973|pages=207–232|issn=0010-0285|doi=10.1016/0010-0285(73)90033-9}}
7. ^Keene and Spraggett, pp.141–151
8. ^ABC News (1998-10-06) "The Power of Belief: How Our Beliefs Can Impact Our Minds", ABC News (2007-06-04)
9. ^{{cite book | last =Festinger | first =Leon | authorlink =Leon Festinger |authorlink2=Henry Riecken|author2=Henry W. Riecken |author3=Stanley Schachter|authorlink3=Stanley Schachter | title =When Prophecy Fails: A Social and Psychological Study of a Modern Group that Predicted the Destruction of the World | publisher =University of Minnesota Press | year =1956 | location = | isbn = 978-1-59147-727-3}}
10. ^{{cite news |title=A Conversation With Harold Camping, Prophesier of Judgment Day |url=http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2011/05/a_conversation_with_harold_cam.html |newspaper=New York Magazine |date=May 11, 2011 |accessdate=October 13, 2011}}
11. ^{{cite news |title=Harold Camping is at the heart of a mediapocalypse |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2011/may/21/local/la-me-rapture-20110521 |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=May 21, 2011 |accessdate=October 13, 2011 |first=Christopher |last=Goffard}}
12. ^http://www.lamblion.us/2011/03/harold-camping-end-time-scenario.html
13. ^{{cite web |url = http://www.ebiblefellowship.com/may21/index.html |title = May 21, 2011 – Judgment Day!; October 21, 2011 – The End of the World |publisher = Ebiblefellowship.com |date = May 21, 1988 |accessdate =November 29, 2010| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20101028050127/http://ebiblefellowship.com/may21/index.html| archivedate= October 28, 2010 | deadurl= no}}
14. ^{{cite news |title = End of Days in May? Believers enter final stretch |url = http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40885541/m/videos/ |newspaper = Associated Press, cited at MSNBC |date = January 23, 2011 |accessdate =May 9, 2011}}
15. ^{{cite news |last = Amira |first = Dan |title = A Conversation With Harold Camping, Prophesier of Judgment Day |url = http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2011/05/a_conversation_with_harold_cam.html |accessdate =May 21, 2011 |newspaper = New York |date = May 11, 2011| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20110518220328/http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2011/05/a_conversation_with_harold_cam.html| archivedate= May 18, 2011 | deadurl= no}}
16. ^Scocca : Countdown to Armageddon: Maybe the World Will End Friday Night (or Sunday Morning)
17. ^{{cite web |title = Judgment Day |url = http://www.familyradio.com/graphical/literature/judgment/judgment.html |publisher = Family Radio |accessdate = May 16, 2011 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110608095448/http://www.familyradio.com/graphical/literature/judgment/judgment.html |archivedate = June 8, 2011 |deadurl = yes |df = }}
18. ^[https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/americas/radio-host-says-rapture-actually-coming-in-october/article2032209/ Radio host says Rapture actually coming in October] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110529011135/http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/americas/radio-host-says-rapture-actually-coming-in-october/article2032209/ |date=2011-05-29 }} – Globe and Mail. May 23, 2011. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
19. ^{{cite news| url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-13516796 | work=BBC News | title=Rapture: Harold Camping issues new apocalypse date | date=24 May 2011 | accessdate=September 23, 2011}}
20. ^{{cite news |title=Harold Camping Exclusive: Family Radio Founder Retires; Doomsday 'Prophet' No Longer Able to Work |url=http://global.christianpost.com/news/harold-camping-exclusive-family-radio-founder-retires-doomsday-prophet-no-longer-able-to-work-59222/ |newspaper=The Christian Post |date=October 24, 2011 |accessdate=October 25, 2011}}
21. ^"Doomsday prophet remains in hiding". The Daily Mail, October 22, 2011.

Bibliography

  • Keene, M. Lamar and Spraggett, Allen (1997) The Psychic Mafia, Prometheus Books, {{ISBN|1-57392-161-0}}

Further reading

  • Hall, Harriet A., (2006). "Teaching Pigs to Sing: An Experiment in Bringing Critical Thinking to the Masses", Skeptical Inquirer, Vol 30, #3, May/June 2006, pp. 36–39
  • Lalich, Janja. Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults. University of California Press, 2004. {{ISBN|0-520-23194-5}}
  • Raymo, Chet. Skeptics and True Believers: The Exhilarating Connection Between Science and Religion. Walker Publishing, 1998. {{ISBN|0-8027-1338-6}}
  • Singer, Barry and Benassi, Victor A., (1980). "Fooling Some of the People All of the Time", Skeptical Inquirer, Vol 5, #2, Winter 1980/81, pp. 17–24
{{pseudoscience}}{{biases}}{{DEFAULTSORT:True-Believer Syndrome}}

4 : Barriers to critical thinking|Belief|Cognitive inertia|Paranormal

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