Interesting, and if anything, probably understating the effect—most obviously, gun control doesn’t directly overlap with conservative/liberal political self-identification, and the specific matter of concealed carry is even less directly correlated when your average age is nearly 50.
On the other hand, the lack of interviews to see how people explain their decision-making process is… not ideal. Scientific procedure is good and all, but I’d be very surprised if at least some of the folk with strong opinions on this matter did not read the question as what they’d suggest instead of what the study itself says, and that brings us more to questions about whether their pre-existing beliefs are well-formed. I know I’d find it very hard to point to the ‘wrong’ answer just because one new study contradicts thirty older ones, especially a new study without citations (and, since gun control usually focuses on /violent/ crime instead of general crime, not the most useful one).
The graph clustering is probably an even more disheartening part of the story. The “rash cream” version of the question is not a very difficult math problem, and nearly sixty percent of the survey population got it wrong, disturbingly close to simple random selection. Compared to that, the politically-motivated innumeracy is almost a drop in the bucket.
Because the study in question here used a general political scale and party self-identification, many people will be identified as favoring gun control even if they did not do so. There are good reasons for this—I’d accuse the study of priming its subjects, if the authors asked about beliefs on gun control directly before asking about a hypothetical study on gun control—but it’s an important thing to note, and the study largely skims over it.
That’s most immediately important, because if you take that 30% of Republicans and 20% of Democrats, and then try to think about ways they could tilt the results of the study, you end up with the possibility that politically-motivated innumeracy might cause people to do worse at a math question than flipping a coin. At a deeper level, that sort of party identification meaning us-versus-them is kinda a big reason political discourse is so shallow these days.
Interesting, and if anything, probably understating the effect—most obviously, gun control doesn’t directly overlap with conservative/liberal political self-identification, and the specific matter of concealed carry is even less directly correlated when your average age is nearly 50.
On the other hand, the lack of interviews to see how people explain their decision-making process is… not ideal. Scientific procedure is good and all, but I’d be very surprised if at least some of the folk with strong opinions on this matter did not read the question as what they’d suggest instead of what the study itself says, and that brings us more to questions about whether their pre-existing beliefs are well-formed. I know I’d find it very hard to point to the ‘wrong’ answer just because one new study contradicts thirty older ones, especially a new study without citations (and, since gun control usually focuses on /violent/ crime instead of general crime, not the most useful one).
The graph clustering is probably an even more disheartening part of the story. The “rash cream” version of the question is not a very difficult math problem, and nearly sixty percent of the survey population got it wrong, disturbingly close to simple random selection. Compared to that, the politically-motivated innumeracy is almost a drop in the bucket.
???
About 30% of self-identified Republicans and 20% of self-identified Democrats hold opinions on gun control that directly contradict the positions of the political party to which they belong.
Because the study in question here used a general political scale and party self-identification, many people will be identified as favoring gun control even if they did not do so. There are good reasons for this—I’d accuse the study of priming its subjects, if the authors asked about beliefs on gun control directly before asking about a hypothetical study on gun control—but it’s an important thing to note, and the study largely skims over it.
That’s most immediately important, because if you take that 30% of Republicans and 20% of Democrats, and then try to think about ways they could tilt the results of the study, you end up with the possibility that politically-motivated innumeracy might cause people to do worse at a math question than flipping a coin. At a deeper level, that sort of party identification meaning us-versus-them is kinda a big reason political discourse is so shallow these days.