by Promod Puri
When things or incidents happen in front of our own eyes or reported
through trustworthy sources, and we deny them as non-events, there could be a "motivated
reasoning" for that denial.
Psychologists name the observed phenomenon as denialism.
A recent example of denialism is when President Trump refuted the
pandemic of COVID-19 in its early stage. And when most of India's upper and wealthy
class refused to accept the plight of migrant workers in their agonizing walks
back to the villages during the peak Coronavirus lockdown.
Historical events, like the Holocaust, have never happened according
to those who refute the genocide. Climate change is a myth; the theory of
evolution is nonsense, the earth is not round, but a flat dish, are the examples
trapped in the insulated casing of denialism.
In denialism, our social behaviour, political and religious identities
get rigid with the discriminatory pick of pieces of evidence.
Rationalization
becomes irrational in fussy argumentation. And society becomes polarized when
information receiving is selective to match the perceived opinions and
verdicts.
Denialism an irrational act. So why people deny or reject the
basic facts that are undisputed and well-supported by verifiable or
scientifically-proven realities?
Several reasons based on their religious, political or social beliefs
explain the behaviour as it confronts the uncomfortable truths. Moreover,
people who stick to denialism may have personal interests, egotistical or
narcissistic passions. An ideological worldview can be a factor too.
It is for these reasons, in the absence of reality and truth,
denialism gets its spot that creates a mindset fanatic attitude that can cause
roadblocks or deadends to free or liberal thinking.
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