Claire Murphy Morgan | Assessing Public Perspectives of Parapsychology through Facebook

Assessing Public Perspectives of Parapsychology through Facebook: A Discourse Analysis Utilizing Graham’s Hierarchy of Disagreement

Claire Murphy-Morgan¹ & Lesley-Ann Smith²

¹Northumbria University, Newcastle upon-Tyne, United Kingdom

²University of Northampton, United Kingdom

Parapsychology continues to be presented as a controversial academic field online. It is referred to as a pseudoscience on platforms such as Wikipedia, with the continued perception of parapsychology as being a challenge to scientific orthodoxy (Martin, 2021; Murphy-Morgan, McLuhan, & Cooper, 2021; Weiler, 2020). This arguably makes the balanced presentation of parapsychological research and online sharing and broadcasts of related themes challenging, with implications for how the public gain access to up-to-date, accurate, and impartial information about parapsychological research. The dissemination of misinformation via social media is of particular interest in assessing how members of the public participate in scientific discourse.

Boyd (2010) investigated the role of “networked publics” as communities that are shaped or reconfigured by technologies that themselves reconfigure the information available. This includes the means to consume, participate in, and generate information (Taddicken & Krämer, 2021). Social media encompasses diverse and rapidly evolving platforms, comprising functionalities including blogs, sharing of photos, commentary, and direct messaging where audiences are no longer passive recipients but are themselves the active generators of content (Hanna, Rohm, & Crittenden, 2011; Taddicken, & Krämer, 2021). How parapsychology is discussed on social media is seldom investigated.

A recent assessment of public commentaries left on YouTube comment threads of two posted videos focusing on two scientists with opposing views of parapsychology revealed a high level of intolerance of opposing views held by others, reinforcing confirmation bias and polarisation and, in the continued perception held by many commenters, the view that parapsychology sits outside of mainstream science (Murphy-Morgan, Cooper, & Smith, 2022). As a comparative platform, polarization on Facebook is widely examined (Bessi et al., 2016; Del Vicario, 2016), but not in the context of examining what information, or misinformation, is being shared about parapsychology specifically. How individuals also construct their arguments in the discussion thread affordances of Facebook is also potentially of great interest. Facebook allows for longer and more in-depth posts than e.g., YouTube or Twitter. It also allows for discussion and debate.

Graham’s Hierarchy of Disagreement (2008) comprises a pyramid model exploring how argument can be constructed from “name-calling” as the lowest level of the pyramid to “refuting the central point” as the most evolved method of disagreement at the top. Graham’s approach has begun to be explored in the context of interactions and commentary on social media (Pascoal, 2015). In the context of a recent analysis of YouTube commentaries (Murphy-Morgan, Cooper, & Smith, 2022), a range of arguments were used to both refute and support parapsychology as a post-materialist science, from name calling to genuinely open questions as to the nature of issues being discussed (e.g., on thermodynamics). Further examination of publicly generated information about parapsychology would potentially give greater insight into public perceptions, or misconceptions, and allow for the consideration of key challenges and opportunities for presenting parapsychology more accurately and fairly in the online space.

Claire Murphy-Morgan is a Senior Research Assistant in PaCT Lab (Psychology of Communication Technology) in the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences at Northumbria University, UK and is an Alex Tanuous Foundation Ph.D. Scholar whose work explores the presentation of parapsychology online and its implications for science communication. Additional areas of research include eating disorders support, telehealth, hoarding behaviors, and older people’s experiences of supported housing. Claire is currently working towards a Ph.D. by publication via University of Northampton.

Program chaired by Jacob W. Glazier. Download the Abstracts at https://parapsych.org/articles/37/658/2023_abstracts_of_presented_papers.aspx

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Published on October 18, 2024

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