The Language of Lies: How Hate Speech Engages Our Neural
Wiring to Foster Division
Summary: Researchers analyze the language of dictators and
hate groups, uncovering a common use of dehumanizing metaphors to fuel hatred.
Such metaphors ‘switch on’ neural pathways in the brain, bypassing higher
cognitive reasoning centers and steering focus towards certain ideas.
These mental patterns can become entrenched over time,
making it challenging for individuals to revise their views even in the face of
contradicting evidence.
The research underscores the potential dangers posed by such
language, including the escalation of violence and political instability.
Dehumanizing metaphors used in the speech of dictators and
hate groups instill and propagate hatred by exploiting neural circuits in the
brain.
Over time, these neural circuits harden, making it nearly
impossible to reverse these ingrained ideas and resist conspiracy theories or
big lies.
Research suggests that those who strongly believe in such
narratives are unlikely to change their minds, even when confronted with
evidence contradicting their beliefs.
In Politics, Lies and Conspiracy Theories, released today,
Marcel Danesi Ph.D., a professor of semiotics and linguistic anthropology at
the University of Toronto, Canada, analyzes the speeches of dictators including
Mussolini, Stalin, Putin and Hitler, as well as prominent hate groups.
His research finds there is one thing they all have in
common: they all use dehumanizing metaphors to instill and propagate hatred of
others.
“The intent of such speech is to attack those who do not
belong to the mainstream, such as racial minorities, or people of different
sexual orientations,” says Danesi.
Powerful language
For example words like ‘pests’, ‘reptiles’ and ‘parasites’
were used by the Nazi regime to compare outsiders and minorities to animals.
Meanwhile in August 2017, when groups of white supremacists
arrived in the college town of Charlottesville to participate in a ‘Unite the
Right’ rally, the protesters used both animal and dirt metaphors when they
claimed that they were fighting against the ‘parasitic class of anti-white
vermin’ and the ‘anti-white, anti-American filth.’
With the rise of populist and far-right political movements
in the 2010s, the use of dehumanizing metaphors to engender hatred of
foreigners or of those who are different in some way has spread worldwide.
In 2016, during a state-orchestrated public campaign against
refugees and migrants in Hungary, the prime minister, Viktor Orbán,
characterized them as a poison.
Our brain wiring
Danesi’s research shows that dehumanizing metaphors like
these are so powerful because they tap into and ‘switch on’ existing circuits
in the brain that link together important and salient images and ideas. In
effect, metaphors bypass higher cognitive reasoning centers, directing our
thoughts to focus on certain things whilst ignoring others.
According to Danesi, the more these circuits are activated
the more hardwired they become, until it becomes almost impossible to turn them
off. The same is true of conspiracy theories – research shows that people who
believe them develop more rigid neural pathways, meaning they find it difficult
to rethink situations.
“When we come across a big lie or a conspiracy theory, it
can shape our ideas without us even being aware of it,” says Danesi.
“By being exposed to particular metaphors, we may develop
hostile feelings towards specific groups – this is why hate groups use
metaphors to turn the switches on, so as to motivate people to violent
activism.”
Entrenched ideas
Unfortunately, research into this brain wiring also shows
that once people begin to believe lies, they are unlikely to change their minds
even when confronted with evidence that contradicts their beliefs.
On the contrary, these people will instead seek out
information that confirms their beliefs, avoid anything that is in conflict
with them, or even turn the contrasting information on its head, so as to make
it fit their beliefs.
For this reason, it is unlikely that people with strong
convictions will ever change their minds about anything.
According to Danesi, this can have devastating consequences.
“When lies are used to generate hate, harmful behaviors tend
to result, including violence and genocide against the target individual or
groups,” says Danesi.
“The spread of lies is also becoming a powerful factor in
generating political and social instability worldwide, destabilizing
democracies.”
What can be done?
Is there anything we can do to protect ourselves from the
power of lies? According to Danesi, the best thing we can do is to understand
the metaphors of the other party, and to examine one’s own metaphors.
However, history and science tells us that it is unlikely to
work – research shows that once a lie is accepted as believable, the brain
becomes more susceptible to subsequent lying.
Author: Becky Parker-Ellis
Source: Taylor and Francis Group
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