Pacific Standard May-June 2013 Cover

ESP Study Suggests Lack of Trust in Science

Newly published research on belief in ESP suggests a public disregard for — and perhaps even hostility toward — the scientific consensus.


Newly published research on belief in ESP suggests a public disregard for — and perhaps even hostility toward — the scientific consensus. (sapandr/istockphoto)
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Scientists wondering just how low faith in their field has fallen will get some uncomfortable answers in a study examining belief in Extrasensory Perception, recently published in the online journal Current Research in Social Psychology.

In the experiment, conducted by a University of Maryland research team led by sociologist Heather Ridolfo, 160 participants watched a short video in which an individual is remarkably successful at a card-guessing game. In fact, the film’s star was informed of the answers, but it appeared to the study participants that she was either extremely lucky or had some sort of sixth sense.

After viewing the video, participants completed a series of questions, including whether they believed in ESP and whether they thought the card-guesser they just saw was demonstrating that ability.

The participants were broken up into four groups. Those in Condition One were informed that 25 percent of the public believes in ESP, but the scientific community rejects the concept. Those in Condition Two were told that more than 90 percent of the public believes in ESP, but the scientific community considers it bogus.

Those in Condition Three were told that 25 percent of the public believes in ESP, and the scientific community is becoming more open to the idea. Those in Condition Four were informed that more than 90 percent of the public believes in ESP, and the scientific community is beginning to warm to the possibility it is real.

“We found relatively strong evidence that individuals are more likely to accept paranormal claims as true when they believe such claims have popular support,” the researchers write. However, “We found no effects indicating that science rejecting a claim led individuals to be less likely to believe the claim.

“In fact, when participants believed that science rejected a claim, they moved in the direction of being more likely to accept the clam as true. This finding ran counter to our expectations, but is consistent with findings that trust in science is decreasing.”

To put it another way: Those told ESP had widespread popular support were likely to express agreement with that consensus, regardless of the scientific consensus. But among those who were informed that only one-quarter of the population believed in the phenomenon, support was actually higher when science gave it a thumbs-down.

That collective gulp was from the climatologist community, which has every right to worry whether its warnings of the consequences of global warming are not only being tuned out, but actively discounted by a cynical public. Perhaps a study of paranormal beliefs is too specific to indicate a widespread distrust of lab-coated authority figures, but perhaps that’s precisely what it suggests.

“These findings may be due to individuals seeing paranormal belief as a matter of faith rather than evidence, and therefore reacting against science,” the researchers conclude. “Alternatively, perhaps endorsement from peers provides a stronger source of legitimacy for paranormal beliefs than authorization from a higher authority. Or the findings may result from a decreasing trust in the institution of science.”

If the latter interpretation is true, you don’t need ESP to foresee troubling times ahead.

About Tom Jacobs

Staff writer Tom Jacobs is a veteran journalist with more than 20 years experience at daily newspapers. He has served as a staff writer for The Los Angeles Daily News and the Santa Barbara News-Press. His work has also appeared in The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Ventura County Star.

  • Drazen

    Interesting research I must admit. I think people believe what they want to believe, it’s absolutely more fun to think that someone can read minds or stuff like that. On the other way, science is science and it needs proof. Just the other day I have found a great website containing free science books and journals, if you are interested. The site is called Sciyo, http://sciyo.com/ .

  • Tim Hayes

    Maybe someone should read the scientific studies done for the Navy by Andrija Puharich in the sixties; Beyond Telepathy, and the Sacred Mushroom. Very hard to find books, especially first additions with the math and science data in them. Those running this experiment should first look at the science.

  • Bob Rosenberg

    People who grow up absorbing a simple cultural message that “alcohol/sex/drugs are bad” are likely to tune out that message as clueless or a flat lie the first time they personally violate the taboo. Individuals who are told that “psi doesn’t exist” have the same reaction toward the purveyors of that message when they or someone they trust has a precognitive dream, a telepathic experience, or a veridical hallucination.

    Psi is real, and all the denial in the world won’t change that. How surprising is it that the hand-waving of the deniers has undermined public confidence in the authority of science?

    Talk about throwing out the baby with the bathwater!

  • BmoreKarl

    It’s too bad the guy in the picture isn’t sticking his fingers in his ears, squeezing his eyes shut and sticking out his tongue.

  • BmoreKarl

    Okay, I have to sound off again. I spent 11 years watching media pundits bash my career – journalism, and there was no counter-offensive. We just laid down and took it.

    Guess what, the media is dying. I got laid off twice last year and couldn’t find a reporting job in my market that would pay half of what I was earning.

    Now there is are well-organized armies of pundits attacking scientific institutions on global warming, vaccinations, you name it.

    Good luck keeping your world together when everybody turns back to wiccanism, herbs and roots and stuffs those roots solidly in their ears so nobody can inform them differently.

    And good luck maintaining a federal, state or local government free of corruption when newspapers slash their budgets for investigative reporting and the only money financing reporters comes from deep pockets with an agenda.

    Not that I’m bitter or anything.

  • Jess H. Brewer

    The article describes an example of psychologists drawing simplistic inferences from superficial data on complex social phenomena. Such bad science doesn’t deserve credulity. When I chaired the Physics colloquia at UBC, I invited a leading ESP researcher to explain his experiments to my Department; much to my embarrassment, his research was so flawed it was ludicrous. I think most people are misinformed, but they are not stupid.

  • David Walter

    I wonder to what extent the study simply suggests that people are substantially influenced by immediate empirical evidence: That seeing is believing.

  • Bruce S Bouck

    This is kind of funny, isn’t it? First, those running the experiment run a sham, lying to the participants in the experiment about the very nature of what they believe they have witnessed. Then the ‘scientists’ lie to the subject again about the statistics surrounding the topic… and then these so-called rational beings, the ‘scientists’ attempt to make some kind of measure of the gullibility or opinions of those they are involving in a duplicitous ‘experiment.’ And then they reveal that the data implies that the subjects appear not to trust ‘science’. Huh???

  • Anonymous

    ESP is real whether you want to believe it or not.

  • Gabby

    @Bob Rosenberg:

    Well Bob, I guess you’re in line to get Randi’s cool one million prize. What are you waiting for?

    “Psi (pronounced sigh) is a term commonly used by parapsychologists to refer to both ESP and psychokinesis taken together. The term was coined by B.P. Weisner and recommended by R.H. Thouless as a term for describing ESP in his 1942 article “The Present Position of Experimental Research into Telepathy and Related Phenomena,” (Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, 47, part 166, pp. 1-19). J. B Rhine (1948 Reach of the Mind) used the term to refer to both ESP and psychokinesis.

    The James Randi Educational Foundation offers a prize of $1,000,000 to anyone who can prove he or she has a psychic ability.”
    –from The Skeptic’s Dictionary

  • whatever

    Not everything in measured in numbers, and deep down we all know it, regardless of what conclusions we draw.