Here's an
article on a 9/11 conspiracy physicist that brings up a number of issues we're discussing in class (specifically
appealing to authority and
confirmation bias).
I've quoted an excerpt of the relevant section on the lone-wolf
semi-expert (physicist) versus the overwhelming consensus of more
relevant experts (structural engineers):
While there are a handful of
Web sites that seek to debunk the claims of Mr. Jones and others in
the movement, most mainstream scientists, in fact, have not seen
fit to engage them.
"There's nothing to debunk," says Zdenek P. Bazant, a professor of
civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern University and
the author of the first peer-reviewed paper on the World Trade Center
collapses.
"It's a non-issue," says Sivaraj Shyam-Sunder, a lead investigator
for the National Institute of Standards and Technology's study of the
collapses.
Ross B. Corotis, a professor of civil engineering at the University
of Colorado at Boulder and a member of the editorial board at the
journal Structural Safety, says that most engineers are pretty
settled on what happened at the World Trade Center. "There's not
really disagreement as to what happened for 99 percent of the
details," he says.
And one more excerpt on reasons to be skeptical of conspiracy theories in general:
One of the most common
intuitive problems people have with conspiracy theories is that they
require positing such complicated webs of secret actions. If the
twin towers fell in a carefully orchestrated demolition shortly after
being hit by planes, who set the charges? Who did the planning?
And how could hundreds, if not thousands of people complicit in the
murder of their own countrymen keep quiet? Usually, Occam's razor intervenes.
Another common problem with conspiracy theories is that they tend to
impute cartoonish motives to "them" — the elites who operate in the
shadows. The end result often feels like a heavily plotted movie
whose characters do not ring true.
Then there are other cognitive Do Not Enter signs: When history
ceases to resemble a train of conflicts and ambiguities and becomes
instead a series of disinformation campaigns, you sense that a basic
self-correcting mechanism of thought has been disabled. A bridge
is out, and paranoia yawns below.
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