
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Host: Chris Mooney
How do you successfully debunk misinformation?
The question is a deceptively simple one—which is precisely the problem.
Debunking is easy—just refute false claims, and provide corrective information.
Debunking successfully is something else again-you have to change minds, and make the corrective information stick. And how does that work?
Well, as it turns out, we actually don't know very much about the process. But what we do know was recently compiled into a brilliant short document, the Debunking Handbook, available free for download from the website Skeptical Science.
Point of Inquiry recently caught up with one of its authors, John Cook, in San Francisco at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
John Cook is the Climate Communication Fellow for the Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland in Australia. He studied physics, and maintains the popular global warming website "Skeptical Science," which refutes misinformation by explaining, in user friendly fashion, the findings of the peer reviewed literature.
By Center for InquiryHost: Chris Mooney
How do you successfully debunk misinformation?
The question is a deceptively simple one—which is precisely the problem.
Debunking is easy—just refute false claims, and provide corrective information.
Debunking successfully is something else again-you have to change minds, and make the corrective information stick. And how does that work?
Well, as it turns out, we actually don't know very much about the process. But what we do know was recently compiled into a brilliant short document, the Debunking Handbook, available free for download from the website Skeptical Science.
Point of Inquiry recently caught up with one of its authors, John Cook, in San Francisco at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
John Cook is the Climate Communication Fellow for the Global Change Institute at the University of Queensland in Australia. He studied physics, and maintains the popular global warming website "Skeptical Science," which refutes misinformation by explaining, in user friendly fashion, the findings of the peer reviewed literature.

2,368 Listeners

4,043 Listeners

947 Listeners

2,666 Listeners

826 Listeners

435 Listeners

945 Listeners

705 Listeners

966 Listeners

1,433 Listeners

2,861 Listeners

189 Listeners

941 Listeners

4,167 Listeners

506 Listeners