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Making better decisions, eschewing conspiracy, populism and science denial: analysing the attributes of individuals who engage effectively with ideas

Making better decisions, eschewing conspiracy, populism and science denial: analysing the attributes of individuals who engage effectively with ideas
Making better decisions, eschewing conspiracy, populism and science denial: analysing the attributes of individuals who engage effectively with ideas
How can we encourage individuals to engage with beneficial ideas, while eschewing dark ideas such as science denial, conspiracy theories, or populist rhetoric? This paper inves-tigates the mechanisms underpinning individuals' engagement with ideas, proposing a model grounded in education, social networks, and pragmatic prospection. Beneficial ideas enhance decision-making, improving individual and societal outcomes, while dark ideas lead to suboptimal consequences, such as diminished trust in institutions and health-related harm. Using a Structural Equation Model (SEM) based on survey data from 7,000 respondents across seven European countries, we test hypotheses linking critical thinking, network dynamics, and pragmatic prospection (i.e. a forward-looking mindset) to the value individuals ascribe to engaging with ideas, their ability to identify positive and dark ideas effectively, how individuals subsequently engage with ideas and who they engage in them with. Our results highlight two key pathways: one linking pragmatic prospection to network-building and idea-sharing, and another connecting critical reasoning and knowledge acquisition to effective ideas engagement. Together, these pathways illustrate how interventions in education, network development, and forward-planning can empower individuals to critically evaluate and embrace positive ideas while rejecting those that might be detrimental. The paper concludes with rec-ommendations for policy and future research to support an ideas-informed society.
ideas, social networks, prospection;, education;, ideas-engagement;, misinformation;, ideas-informed society
2078-2489
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Luzmore, Ruth
b898f63b-2b3a-4134-8cdc-6fe0e2bc9af9
Wang, Yin
d2b62b39-cf7e-49ed-9405-88f0f2a0dc63
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
Luzmore, Ruth
b898f63b-2b3a-4134-8cdc-6fe0e2bc9af9
Wang, Yin
d2b62b39-cf7e-49ed-9405-88f0f2a0dc63

Brown, Chris, Luzmore, Ruth and Wang, Yin (2025) Making better decisions, eschewing conspiracy, populism and science denial: analysing the attributes of individuals who engage effectively with ideas. Information, 16 (3), [248]. (doi:10.3390/info16030248).

Record type: Article

Abstract

How can we encourage individuals to engage with beneficial ideas, while eschewing dark ideas such as science denial, conspiracy theories, or populist rhetoric? This paper inves-tigates the mechanisms underpinning individuals' engagement with ideas, proposing a model grounded in education, social networks, and pragmatic prospection. Beneficial ideas enhance decision-making, improving individual and societal outcomes, while dark ideas lead to suboptimal consequences, such as diminished trust in institutions and health-related harm. Using a Structural Equation Model (SEM) based on survey data from 7,000 respondents across seven European countries, we test hypotheses linking critical thinking, network dynamics, and pragmatic prospection (i.e. a forward-looking mindset) to the value individuals ascribe to engaging with ideas, their ability to identify positive and dark ideas effectively, how individuals subsequently engage with ideas and who they engage in them with. Our results highlight two key pathways: one linking pragmatic prospection to network-building and idea-sharing, and another connecting critical reasoning and knowledge acquisition to effective ideas engagement. Together, these pathways illustrate how interventions in education, network development, and forward-planning can empower individuals to critically evaluate and embrace positive ideas while rejecting those that might be detrimental. The paper concludes with rec-ommendations for policy and future research to support an ideas-informed society.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 March 2025
Published date: 19 March 2025
Keywords: ideas, social networks, prospection;, education;, ideas-engagement;, misinformation;, ideas-informed society

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500065
ISSN: 2078-2489
PURE UUID: 3dc2d097-e63f-46c5-bae6-35bdae559fa9
ORCID for Chris Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9759-9624
ORCID for Ruth Luzmore: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2454-9407
ORCID for Yin Wang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0004-9440-2410

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Date deposited: 14 Apr 2025 16:49
Last modified: 15 Apr 2025 02:38

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Contributors

Author: Chris Brown ORCID iD
Author: Ruth Luzmore ORCID iD
Author: Yin Wang ORCID iD

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