BBC Science Focus

WHAT MAKES A CONSPIRACY THEORY?

Despite their diversity, there are certain ingredient­s that many conspiracy theories share

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“KNOWLEDGE HAS BEEN SEPARATED FROM TRADITIONA­L POWER STRUCTURES”

SUSPICION

Often there’s an official story, and conspiracy theories explicitly push back against it, such as with 9/11. The official story is that this was a terrorist attack, but the conspiracy theory is that it was the government, or someone else. However, conspiracy theories can also emerge as an event unfolds, before the official story becomes clear, in the guise of “there is more to this than we are being told”.

DECEPTION

Conspiracy theorists tend to believe that everyone else is being deceived, apart from themselves. The methods of deception, they believe, are elaborate, complex, ongoing and executed almost perfectly – pulling the wool over the eyes of those who haven’t yet ‘seen the light’.

WICKEDNESS

When real-life scandals are uncovered, we usually find petty self-interest is at the root of it. But in many conspiracy theories, the motivation is apocalypti­c and wicked – such as in the case of the ‘Pizzagate’ conspiracy theory that went viral during the 2016 US presidenti­al election campaign, in which Democrats were accused of running a paedophile ring through pizza restaurant­s.

SELECTIVE PROOF

According to some experts, a key characteri­stic of conspiracy theories is that they have not yet been shown conclusive­ly to be true, but are simultaneo­usly impossible to disprove, as any contradict­ing evidence is discounted. Take the Flat Earth theory: adherents are still seeking evidence to prove they are right, but no amount of proof showing that we live on a globe can convince them that they are wrong.

ANOMALY HUNTING

Conspiracy theories are often based not on hard evidence, but on picking holes in the mainstream narrative, pointing out what does not fit or does not seem to have an explanatio­n, and using this as evidence that the conspiracy theory must be true.

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