Brain Study Reveals Why Society is So Easily Controlled by
Politics — Differing Views Seen as ‘Threats’
By Justin Gardner
A new scientific study shows why people readily abandon
rationality for political beliefs. It also underscores how well Establishment
forces have been able to push the populace into an ‘us vs. them’ mindset.
Researchers at the Brain and Creativity Institute used functional
MRI – a revolutionary technique that maps the brain by coupling cerebral blood
flow and neuronal activation – to find out what happens in the brain on
politics.
“When people’s
political beliefs are challenged, their brains become active in areas that
govern personal identity and emotional responses to threats, neuroscientists
have found.”
This would certainly explain how a hyper-partisan atmosphere
breeds knee-jerk hostility, and agreement on anything becomes out of reach.
“During their brain
imaging sessions, participants were presented with eight political statements
that they had said they believe just as strongly as a set of eight nonpolitical
statements. They were then shown five counter-claims that challenged each
statement…
The study found
that people who were most resistant to changing their beliefs had more activity
in the amygdalae (a pair of almond-shaped areas near the center of the brain)
and the insular cortex, compared with people who were more willing to change
their minds.
“The activity in
these areas, which are important for emotion and decision-making, may relate to
how we feel when we encounter evidence against our beliefs,” said Kaplan, a
co-director of the Dornsife Cognitive Neuroimaging Center at USC.
“The amygdala in
particular is known to be especially involved in perceiving threat and
anxiety,” Kaplan added. “The insular cortex processes feelings from the body,
and it is important for detecting the emotional salience of stimuli. That is
consistent with the idea that when we feel threatened, anxious or emotional,
then we are less likely to change our minds.”
Instead of treating a political subject like a normal debate
topic – weighing factual evidence and its relation to other significant
realities – it can quickly devolve into an irrational state. Enlightenment is
sacrificed as the goal becomes defeating ‘the other.’
As Aristotle said, “It is the mark of an educated mind to be
able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” Sadly, this is becoming an
endangered art.
The situation is ripe for exploitation by the propaganda
machine to advance The Narrative. The corporatocracy and mainstream media
thrive when people are distracted by meaningless argument and manufactured
rage. Rational discussion is a threat to the establishment.
Now, what passes for the national discourse is nothing more
than shouting matches by talking heads armed with the day’s talking points – as
seen on cable TV ‘news’ channels. Amygdalas are running wild.
When someone actually tries to parse an issue outside of the
‘us vs. them’ scenario, it seems a foreign language to the audience.
Researchers involved in the study take a less pessimistic
view, noting that the brain’s Default Mode Network also surges in activity when
political beliefs are challenged.
“These areas of the
brain have been linked to thinking about who we are, and with the kind of
rumination or deep thinking that takes us away from the here and now,” said
lead author Jonas Kaplan.
“The researchers
said that this latest study, along with one conducted earlier this year,
indicate the Default Mode Network is important for high-level thinking about
important personal beliefs or values…
“We should
acknowledge that emotion plays a role in cognition and in how we decide what is
true and what is not true,” Kaplan said. “We should not expect to be
dispassionate computers. We are biological organisms.”
Of course, he is correct that no argument is free of
subjective experience, and this will play into how even the most rational
person debates a topic. We can have a high degree of objectivity, but — just as
science cannot achieve 100% certainty — we can never be 100% objective.
The functions of the amygdala and the Default Mode Network
are indeed critical to our highly evolved state. There is certainly nothing
‘bad’ about them.
However, the fact that political debate is linked to these
powerful forces — emotional responses to threats and personal identity — means
political discussions have even less chance of reaching a logical conclusion
free of bias.
Now, more than ever, the U.S. seems gripped by political
division. Thanks to science, we have a little more understanding of how
Washington politicians can throw rationality out the window and yet be so
effective at influencing the masses.
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