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Flat Earth

I’m a skeptic, and I love the flat-Earth movement

Satellite view of planet Earth

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The Denver Post recently featured an article about Coloradans who believe that the Earth is flat. As if that wasn’t surprising enough, some members of this community also believe that they are the recipients of flat-Earth prejudice, which I will now term “terrashapism.”

I don’t believe the Earth is flat; given my background, this is not surprising. I am a psychology professor who studies pseudoscience. I lecture about the fallibility of human intuition and the corresponding need for empiricism. I am a member of the National Center for Science Education. I am also a member of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry and a local group called Colorado Skeptics. Skeptics generally doubt claims that lack legitimate evidence, but support claims that do.

Read the story: These Coloradans say Earth is flat. And gravity’s a hoax. Now, they’re being persecuted.

Accordingly, one might think that I would have nothing positive to say about the flat Earthers who meet just over my horizon. Not so. I love the flat Earth movement. As far as I’m concerned, flat Earthers are welcome to deflate the global Earth faster than New England Patriots footballs. To me, the flat-Earth movement isn’t a threat to scientific sensibility. That threat is already alive and well. Instead, the flat-Earth movement exposes the contradictions that many people create when they disparage flat Earthers, but tolerate or actively support other forms of pseudoscience.

Contradiction No. 1: Conspiracy theories. Global Earthers might ask, “But what about photographs of Earth taken from space?” Flat Earthers can dismiss this evidence as part of a NASA conspiracy. That might seem like delusional paranoia, but it isn’t much different than conspiracy theories employed in other pseudoscientific domains. Widespread evidence supporting vaccination has been somehow generated by Big Pharma. Widespread evidence supporting man-made global warming is the result of a politically leftist conspiracy, possibly with Greenpeace.

Contradiction No. 2: Science denial. Flat Earthers are hardly alone in rejecting or ignoring scientific evidence. Granted, the case against the flat Earth is particularly strong. It still seems hypocritical to consider flat Earthers “stupid” or “crazy” while simultaneously supporting healing crystals, the medicinal benefits of essential oils, creationism, anti-vaccination, climate-change denial, and so forth.

Contradiction No. 3: Science education and fairness. Many voters want to force science education to include popular pseudoscientific theories like creationism and climate change denial. Supporters of this type of science education manipulation often argue that providing alternative points of view is only fair. By this logic, however, one could argue that flat Earthers similarly have a right to be heard over the heartless prejudice exhibited by conventional scientists who just aren’t open to alternative ways of thinking. No need to worry about false equivalence. The children will surely figure out the truth for themselves.

I have made similar arguments previously. Reiterating the relationship between the flat-Earth movement and other forms of pseudoscience is still worthwhile. United States residents continue to harm themselves and people around the globe through their haphazard promotion of the pseudoscientific. Flat-Earth theory continues to provide a learning opportunity that could help the United States stem the rising tide of its pseudoscientific ways.

Besides, when I last wrote about the flat Earth movement, it was in response to an individual (NBA player Kyrie Irving). This time I am writing in response to a small group. Maybe in a year I will write in response to a sizable flat-Earth convention in Denver. Fine by me. I am not really worried about the flat Earth. I am worried about an old Earth becoming an unvaccinated hothouse Earth. We can maintain a healthy Earth by recognizing that flat Earthers are not alone in promoting scientifically untenable ideas. Susceptibility to pseudoscience is a human characteristic. Together, we can temper the problems created by this susceptibility by supporting genuine science education and embracing effective forms of scientific reasoning.

Craig A. Foster is a professor of psychology at the U.S. Air Force Academy.

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This article has been archived for your research. The original version from The Denver Post can be found here.