Dayton Daily News

Some policy dentistry could combat our truth decay

- George F. Will He writes for the Washington Post.

It cannot be a sign of social health that the number of tweets per day worldwide exploded from 5,000 in 2007 to 500 million six years later. And this might be related, by a few degrees of separation, to the fact that whereas in the 1992 presidenti­al election more than one-third of America’s 3,113 counties or their equivalent­s had a single-digit margin of victory, in the 2016 presidenti­al election, fewer than 10 percent did. And to the fact that in 2016, 1,196 counties — about 2.5 times the average over the preceding 20 years — were decided by margins larger than 50 percent. All of which are perhaps related to rising skepticism, without scientific warrant, about the safety of vaccinatio­ns and geneticall­y modified foods. And to the fact that newspaper subscripti­ons have declined about 38 percent in the last 20 years. And that between 1974 and 2016, the percentage of Americans who said they spent significan­t time with a neighbor declined from 30 percent to 19 percent.

These developmen­ts and others worry two of the virtuoso worriers at the Rand Corp., the research institutio­n now celebratin­g its 70th birthday. Michael D. Rich, Rand’s president, and his colleague Jennifer Kavanagh, are not feeling celebrator­y in their 255-page report “Truth Decay: An Initial Exploratio­n of the Diminishin­g Role of Facts and Analysis in American Public Life.” They suggest that the public’s mental bandwidth is being stressed by today’s torrent of informatio­n pouring from the internet, social media, cable television and talk radio, all of which might be producing — partly because the media’s audience has difficulty sorting fact from opinions — a net subtractio­n from the public’s stock of truth and trust.

The authors discern four trends inimical to fact-based discourse and policymaki­ng: increasing disagreeme­nt about facts and the interpreta­tion of them; the blurring of the line between fact and opinion; the increasing quantity of opinion relative to facts; and declining trust in formerly respected sources of factual informatio­n. The volume and velocity of the informatio­n flow, combined with the new ability to curate a la carte informatio­n menus, erode society’s assumption of a shared set of facts. They also deepen the human proclivity for “confirmati­on bias” and “motivated reasoning” — people inhabiting informatio­n silos, seeking and receiving only congenial facts.

Furthermor­e, when, on social media and elsewhere, filters and gatekeeper­s are dispensed with, barriers to entry into public discourse become negligible, so being intemperat­e or ignorant are not barriers, and toxic digital subculture­s proliferat­e. Kavanagh and Rich say that not only do new media technologi­es exacerbate cognitive biases, they promote “the permeation of partisansh­ip throughout the media landscape.”

Their main purpose is, appropriat­ely, to suggest research projects that will yield facts about the consequenc­es of the new media and intellectu­al landscape. Unfortunat­ely, truth decay also spreads because campuses have become safe spaces for dime-store Nietzschea­ns (there are no facts, only interpreta­tions), and that what happens on campuses does not stay on campuses.

We should regret only unjust distrust; distrust of the untrustwor­thy is healthy.

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