Childhood
Origins of Adult Resistance to Science
Paul Bloom and Deena Skolnick Weisberg
Resistance
to certain scientific ideas derives in large part from assumptions and
biases that can be demonstrated experimentally in young children and
that may persist into adulthood. In particular, both adults and children
resist acquiring scientific information that clashes with common-sense
intuitions about the physical and psychological domains. Additionally,
when learning information from other people, both adults and children
are sensitive to the trustworthiness of the source of that information.
Resistance to science, then, is particularly exaggerated in societies
where nonscientific ideologies have the advantages of being both grounded
in common sense and transmitted by trustworthy sources.
Department
of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.