I agree with your sentiment that most of this is influenced by motivated reasoning.
I would add that “Joep” in the Denial story is motivated by cognitive dissonance, or rather the attempt to reduce cognitive dissonance by discarding one of the two ideas “x-risk is real and gives me anxiety” and “I don’t want to feel anxiety”.
In the People Don’t Have Images story, “Dario” is likely influenced by the availability heuristic, where he is attempting to estimate the likelihood of a future event based on how easily he can recall similar past events.
I agree with your sentiment that most of this is influenced by motivated reasoning.
I would add that “Joep” in the Denial story is motivated by cognitive dissonance, or rather the attempt to reduce cognitive dissonance by discarding one of the two ideas “x-risk is real and gives me anxiety” and “I don’t want to feel anxiety”.
In the People Don’t Have Images story, “Dario” is likely influenced by the availability heuristic, where he is attempting to estimate the likelihood of a future event based on how easily he can recall similar past events.