George Will and Cognitive Dissonance

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It was one of the great blogospheric takedowns of scientificย misinformation.

In a February 2009 anti-global warming column, the Washington Postโ€™s George Will wrote that โ€œaccording to the U.N. World Meteorological Organization, there has been no recorded global warming for more than a decade, or one-third of the span since the global cooling scare.โ€ It wasnโ€™t the only wrong or misleading claim in the column, but it was perhaps the most outrageousโ€”for the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) not only supports but documents the mainstream scientific view that humans are causing global warming. Indeed, as of the time Will was writing, the WMO had pointed out a much more relevant statistic: Of the 10 hottest years on record, at least 7 had been in the 2000s.

When Willโ€™s column came out, a feeding frenzy ensued in the scientific and environmental blogosphere. Bloggers wanted to know why a columnist writing for such an important paper could get it so dramatically wrong, and abuse reputable sources with such impunityโ€”did any fact checking actually occur? Were there any standards at allย for the handling of scientific information in the media?

Willโ€™s column therefore became a case study, and the scandal eventually made its way not only to the Washington Post ombudsman,ย but also to the oped and letter pages, where WMO secretary general Michel Jarraudย corrected Will, as did I. Will never retracted his claims, and the Post did not run an official correctionโ€“but still, it was a considerable accomplishment in terms of balancing the record, not only in the blogosphere but in the old media publication where the problem had actuallyย begun.

Okay. Deepย breath.

This history, it seems to me, is necessary context for thinking about a more recent blowup about another George Will columnโ€”this one, in which Will argues that incoming congressional Republicans, eager to slash the federal budget, should not cut our needed investments in research and scientific innovationโ€“because the potential they hold for the economy isย huge.

For this, Joe Romm quickly labeled Will โ€œhypocrite of the yearโ€ (and itโ€™s early), pointing out not only Willโ€™s transgressions against climate science, but also the history of GOP attacks on, and impediments to, clean energy innovation. Meanwhile Andy Revkinย posed some hard questions: Would Will also endorse GOP moderate Sherwood Boehlertโ€™s call to incoming legislators to respect climate science? And precisely what part of the federal scientific portfolio would he like toย increase?

Very good things to askโ€”but my take on Will is a bit different. I agree with Romm that heโ€™s a hypocriteโ€”but Iโ€™m also sure Will doesnโ€™t think of himself asย one.

The truth is that you almost never find an โ€œanti-scienceโ€ ideologue who welcomes the label. Indeed, even as we have constant fights over the science of climate change, evolution, and vaccination, the U.S. public professes to have very high levels of trust in science and confidence in the leaders of the scientific communityโ€“at least in theย abstract.

So whatโ€™s going on here? For after all, George Will is hardly the only case like thisโ€”Newt Gingrich, for instance, was another big time Republican science booster. But when he ran Congress, attacks on science were rampant on issues like climate change and ozoneย depletion.

Psychologists have a theory called โ€œcognitive dissonance,โ€ย which seeks to explain how we resolve uncomfortable contradictions in our minds in a way that makes us feel better about ourselves and our identities.ย So for instance: โ€œIโ€™m a really kind, caring personโ€ and โ€œI really hate that personโ€ donโ€™t ย go together very wellโ€”unless the contradiction can be in some sense resolved: โ€œThat person deserves it.โ€ Or letโ€™s try another one: โ€œIโ€™m a smokerโ€ and โ€œSmoking killsโ€ donโ€™t really go togetherโ€”unless the contradiction can be resolved: โ€œSmoking keeps me thin and Iโ€™ll quit in a few years when being thin matters less toย me.โ€

You can probably see where this is going. I canโ€™t say what Will actually thinks of himself. And I donโ€™t know whether heโ€™s ever experienced any acute sense of cognitive dissonance. But I am willing to betย that he does not consider himself to be virulently anti-science, and that he sees no contradiction between his recent โ€œrah rah researchโ€ column and his long history of climate denialย columns.

Rather, itโ€™s more likely Will thinks that climate science, being corrupt (in his mind), gives the rest of science a bad name. Indeed, he may well think that heโ€™s a truer science defender than those of us who fail to call out the corrupt climate researchers (again, in his mind), as heย does.

In the spade-spade department, itโ€™s very very important to point out just how dishonest Will has been on the topic of climate change. As I discussed with political scientist Brendan Nyhan on aย recent episode of the Point of Inquiry podcast, if we want a healthier and more wholesome information environment then we need โ€œnaming and shamingโ€ of pundits and elites who mislead the public about basicย facts.

But at the same time, you have to admit: Willโ€™s pro-science pretensions are politically beneficial. Heโ€™s much more likely to be heeded by incoming Republicans than I am. They donโ€™t consider themselves anti-science either, Iโ€™m sure. And even if it isnโ€™t climate science, there are areas where Will could influence them positivelyโ€”for instance, getting them to reconsider what appears to be a very ill-conceivedย plan of budgetary attacks on the National Scienceย Foundation.

Does this mean we should praise Will when heโ€™s right but attack him when heโ€™s wrong? Does it mean we should nod knowingly? Iโ€™m not sure. In a world of gray, rather than black and white, Iโ€™m open toย suggestions.

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