Skip to main content

Verified by Psychology Today

Conspiracy theories abound throughout history, especially in times of crisis, such as the worldwide Covid-19 pandemic. People who believe these theories often have a sense of existential threat: a perceived danger to one’s own life or well-being. People then consume, believe, and share these theories as a way of making sense of that threat.

Whatever the belief, researchers find that people who believe in conspiracies distrust others, are more likely to be paranoid, and often have low-self-esteem.

Why We Believe
Gurza Shutterstock

Why do people believe in outlandish plots? Researchers reported in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science that the reasons for believing in conspiracy theories include the need for certainty, the need for control over one’s life, the need for a positive self-image as well as the desire to feel unique.

Why is the need for certainty important in conspiracy thinking?

We seek explanations for events and want to know why things happen the way that they do. We then land on answers to these questions that are not necessarily true. However, what is more important than the truth? The answers must comfort us and fit into our worldview.

Why is the need for control important in conspiracy thinking?

Everyone wants to feel that they’re in control of their lives. Many people feel safer when they’re the driver of the car rather than the passenger. But even the best drivers can get into accidents for reasons beyond their control. Conspiracy theories give believers this sense of control and security.

article continues after advertisement
The Neuroscience of Conspiracy Thinking
HollyHarry_Shutterstock

Things that do not happen for a reason are unsettling and appear menacing. That may be one reason why about half of us believe in one conspiracy theory or another. And that number is plausible, especially when some sinister actions have turned out to be true. It took tobacco companies 40 years to publicly admit that smoking causes cancer, for example.

Why are some people more open to plots and plans?

People have a tendency to prefer dispositional explanations to situational ones. When we observe an event, we are much more likely to attribute it to some intentional motive than to circumstance or happenstance. This is known as the fundamental attribution error. Conspiracy theories are by definition dispositional, someone planned this for a purpose. They are uniquely satisfying to our minds.

Why are people set with their beliefs?

Confirmation bias refers to the tendency for a person to become attached to beliefs and to search for or interpret information in ways that confirms their preconceptions. Once we settle on a conviction, we will search, remember, and accept only evidence that supports it, while ignoring and neglecting disconfirming evidence. This is why people gravitate to online sites that match their preexisting beliefs and prejudices.

How to Manage Misinformation
Vchal Shutterstock

People still talk about the sinister Illuminati as if the cabal was still at work today. Also, for many people, Elvis is still alive and the 1969 moon landing was completely faked. Social media has heightened the spread of these theories because of the ease with which one can sit in front of a computer and click and click. A person can look for information until they have satisfied their thirst for knowledge. The Internet can affirm any point of view one may have.

Why are these beliefs harmful?

Endorsing and spreading misinformation may be associated with prejudice toward vulnerable groups, a decreased trust in government, decreased civil participation such as exercising one’s vote, and waiving good health habits such as getting vaccinated.

Why censoring does not help.

Social media outlets had banned radio host Alex Jones, who has claimed the validity of numerous theories, one being the Sandy Hook shooting was orchestrated by the U.S. government to promote gun control. But banning and censoring can backfire, in turn fueling the idea that the truth is being silenced.

The Plots We Fall For
MotortionFilms_Shutterstock

Here are a few plots we love, old and new.
• Area 51: Government cover-up of the existence of aliens and UFOs.
• Chemtrails: Chemical/biological agents nefariously sprayed by aircraft
• CIA and AIDS: The virus was created by the CIA to eradicate homosexuals and African-Americans
• COVID and 5G: 5G transmissions trigger human cells to create coronavirus
• Elvis is alive and well
• Flights MH370: One among many theories, The Illuminati was responsible
• Holocaust Deniers: The Nazis did not kill millions of Jews during the Holocaust
• The Illuminati: The world is controlled by this secret society for hundreds of years
• Moon Landing: Staged by NASA in a studio
• Obama Birtherism: Barack Obama was not born in the U.S.
• Paul Is Dead: That Paul McCartney of the Beatles died in 1966 and was replaced by a lookalike
• Pizzagate: Human trafficking and a child sex ring orchestrated by the Democratic Party through certain restaurants
• QAnon: A secret plot against President Trump and his supporters by the Deep State
• Who Killed JFK? The CIA, the Mafia, Lyndon B. Johnson, Fidel Castro, the KGB

Essential Reads