I'm on the train to Gatwick Airport for an interesting conference over the next three days. The topic's going to be interesting - covering social media, behaviour change and, one of my current interests, how you work with a group who have a fixed narrative - a conspiracy theory of one sort or another - that misrepresents what is happening.
I've got a couple of initial propositions on that that I hope to be exploring:
My feeling is that conspiracy theorists tend to see results they do not like and assume that what they see was the result of deliberate, predictable action. To my mind, there are three places that this thinking is often flawed as over-rational:
Examples like today's report in the Financial Times about the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in the USA is a good example of the underlying sense that things are rational and deliberate - and at the very least there will be a smoking gun - a single decision or moment to which everything can be traced back.
The difficulty is that, once a conspiracy theory or master-narrative is in place, it can be very difficult to shift - and rarely by counter-argument. I've blogged before about one of the best-known and most insidious examples - The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. For a detailed story of where they came from - and a history of how they've been used since, I strongly recommend Will Eisner's great The Plot: The Secret Story of 'The Protocols of the Elders of Zion'
It's going to be a fascinating few days.