Misconceptions project

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For my IFLS 012 (regular & Foundation levels) this semester, you will chose a popular misconception and write about it. In your paper, you don't need to spend too much time describing the misconception if it is fairly well known (and I am familiar with a number of these). Instead, you should focus on the following:

  • Why do so many people believe in it?
  • How can it be debunked? (I.e., show why it is wrong)
  • How can we educate the public to prevent people from falling for it?

There are many kinds of misconceptions, which may fall into the following general categories.

  • popular myths and misconceptions
  • fake news
  • Internet rumors
  • popular hoaxes
  • urban legends
  • pseudoscience
  • superstition
  • conspiracy theories
  • pop psychology
  • alternative medicine
  • misconceptions about health, medicine, and health science research

Below are some examples (some categories overlap, and some examples may fall into two or more categories).

1 Popular myths and misconceptions

  • Fan death (leaving a fan on in one's room can be fatal)
  • Anti-vaccine myths (anti-vaxers). Supposedly, vaccines contain harmful substances and may even cause autism.


2 Conspiracy theories

Sometimes these might be simple misconceptions, but often beliefs in a conspiracy behind the misconception are involved.

  • Illuminati theories (see below)
  • 9/11 conspiracy. Since exploding airplanes allegedly could not have caused the World Trade Center to collapse, the buildings were actually blown up by the US government, or Jewish interests, e.g., in order to start a war.
  • NASA moon hoax. The Apollo moon landings allegedly did not really happen; it was filmed in a studio and faked.
  • Alien theories. Aliens are supposedly real, and UFOs are actually aliens. Maybe aliens are kidnapping people and performing experiments on them. Often, this goes along with beliefs that aliens have infiltrated governments and are influencing events and/or are trying to take over the world. These are similar to X-Files type of views of aliens.
  • Reptilians or lizard people. This is a special alien conspiracy theory. Supposedly, major world leaders are actually shape-shifting lizard aliens.
  • Anti-Semitic theories. Various anti-Jewish theories claim that Jews (e.g., Jewish bankers) are involved in some evil conspiracy to control the world or to influence the economy or politics. These are often combined with Illuminati theories.
  • Anti-Catholic theories. Historically speaking, [1] the Catholic Church is the oldest major branch of Christianity (an historical fact). However, fundamentalist Protestants and others believe that the Catholic Church has been involved in a grand world-wide conspiracy to control governments. It is true that the Catholic Church and other churches have had great influence on governments in history, especially in medieval Europe, but this goes further to claim that it engages in a number of secret activities to control events and governments. This may also involve false claims that Catholic beliefs are not Christian, and are even grounded in ancient paganism (e.g., Babylonian religion).
  • Weather control. Various versions of this theory state that major governments like the US or the former Soviet Union have and use technology to control weather patterns. A modern version of this implicates the HAARP program of the US Pentagon.
  • Mind control. Various versions of this theory claim that some entity has and uses technology to control people's minds, including things like making the general public believe in ideas or vote for candidates (which conspiracy theorists think are evil). Believers in such theories think that those controlling peoples' minds are the US government, the former Soviet Union, or evil aliens.
  • Anti-vaxers. Anti-vaccine myths often go further to claim that the medical community, pharmaceutical companies (which manufacture vaccines), and/or governments are involved in a conspiracy to harm children somehow with vaccines.


2.1 Illuminati theories

There was once a secret society in 18th century Bavaria (southern German) of intellectuals who were atheists, agnostics, rationalists, or humanists, who opposed the political power and influence of the Church (e.g., the Catholic Church) or other churches in politics and governments. Since at the time refusing to believe in God was harmful to one's career, they formed a secret society to meet together. Later, it was made illegal and was broken up. There is no evidence that they continued to exist afterwards, and there is no evidence that they had or continued to hold so much power and influence, especially through secret methods of controlling governments. Nonetheless, many conspiracy theorists claim that they continued to exist and have worked secretly to influence and control governments and events. Some claim that the Illuminati still exist today; others claim that they were superseded (taken over, pass on to) other organizations that continue today to do their evil work. Some often merge Illuminati theories with conspiracy theories involving other groups. Below are some common variations. Combinations of two or more of these are also common.



3 Pseudoscience

  • astrology and horoscopes
  • fortune-telling
  • tarot card reading
  • palm reading (reading palm lines on the hand to predict one's future)
  • graphology
  • blood types (blood types determine or influence personality)
  • phrenology (head shape and bumps indicate intelligence and personality)
  • graphology (handwriting style directly reflects personality traits)