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Don't Look Up: Hollywood's Primer On 5 Myths That Fuel Science Denial
The Straits Times
|January 10, 2022
Rejection of science takes many forms and hurts our ability to respond to pandemics and climate change.
Every disaster movie seems to open with a scientist being ignored. Don’t Look Up is no exception – in fact, people ignoring or flat out denying scientific evidence is the point.
Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence play astronomers who make a literally Earth-shattering discovery and then try to persuade the president to take action to save humanity. It’s a satire that explores how individuals, scientists, the media and politicians respond when faced with scientific facts that are uncomfortable, threatening and inconvenient.
The movie is an allegory for climate change, showing how those with the power to do something about global warming wilfully avoid taking action and how those with vested interests can mislead the public. But it also reflects science denial more broadly, including what the world has been seeing with Covid-19.
The most important difference between the film’s premise and humanity’s actual looming crisis is that while individuals may be powerless against a comet, everyone can act decisively to stop fuelling climate change.
Knowing the myths that feed science denial can help.
As research psychologists and the authors of Science Denial: Why It Happens And What to Do About It, we recognise these aspects of science denial all too well.
MYTH 1: WE CAN’T ACT UNLESS THE SCIENCE IS 100 PER CENT CERTAIN
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