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Subjective Validation

David Kyle Johnson

The year that Saturn and Mars are equal fiery,

The air very dry parched long meteor:

Through secret fires a great place blazing from burning heat,

Little rain, warm wind, wars, incursions.

Nostradamus, Century IV, Quatrain 67

An objective validation of a statement can be accomplished by showing that the statement actually matches up to the way the world is; this can be done by comparing the statement to the world itself. For example, if you say that dropped objects accelerate at a speed of 9.9m∕s∕s, I can validate that objectively by dropping objects myself and seeing how fast they acceler­ate. On the other hand, a subjective validation of a statement’s accuracy or meaning occurs when one evaluates its truth or meaning based on one’s personal reaction to that statement - based on how one feels about it, or how it seems. Subjective validation is something that occurs often in humans and consistently leads us astray.

One way we consistently (and inaccurately) validate statements subjectively is by concluding that they apply to us personally. This was first demonstrated by Bertram Forer in 1948. In his now infamous study (see Carroll 2015), he gave the exact same generic, general, and vague personality description to all his students, which read in part:

You have a need for other people to like and admire you, and yet you tend to be critical of yourself. While you have some personality weaknesses you are generally able to compensate for them. You have considerable unused capacity that you have not turned to your advantage. Disciplined and self-controlled on the outside, you tend to be worrisome and insecure on the inside.

He then asked them how accurately they thought the description they had received described them specifically and personally. (Each student thought he was receiving a unique description.) Most thought it was dead on; the class ranked its accuracy as 4.26 out of 5, and those results have been repeated with essentially the same results countless times.

(The overall aver­age is around 4.2.) Clearly, we like to make things about ourselves. Even if they are generic and vague, we like to think they are about us specifically. This is now known as the Forer effect (see Carroll 2015).

Clearly this kind of subjective validation can lead us astray. The Forer effect plays a huge role in making people think that their astrological horo­scope and tarot card readings are accurate. Combined with other mistakes, like confirmation bias and availability error, subjective validation can fool people into thinking that psychics can read their minds, predict the future, or even communicate with the dead.

It is a key component of cold reading, a technique used by psychics to fool people they have never met into thinking that they have information they don’t actually have. (They read the information off of them “cold,” hence “cold reading.”) During a cold reading of a crowd of people hoping to com­municate with their recently deceased loved ones, you might hear something like this:

Medium: I’m feeling like there’s a name with an S sound,

maybe a father figure, possibly from this part of the crowd.

Sitter in the Audience: My husband Sam just passed. I and his two sons miss him.

Medium: Yes, Sam is telling me that he too misses you and

the boys.

The medium is giving something very general - there are lots of S names, and “father figure” could be someone’s husband, someone’s father or grand­father, or even a son that is a father - that is bound to apply to someone in the crowd. The medium is counting on the Forer effect - for someone in the crowd to apply that general “S name/father figure” statement to herself or her deceased love one. When she does, the person in the crowd is likely to reveal some specific information - in this case the deceased’s name and that he had two boys. The medium then repeats that information back to her, to solidify the notion that the statement did apply to her, thus reinforcing the Forer effect.

(And thanks to the malleability of memory, the sitter will also likely later think the medium knew her husband’s name before she said it.) The sitter will likely be amazed and conclude the medium couldn’t have known what he seemed to know unless he had the ability to speak to her deceased loved one. (Consequently the sitter will likely spend lots of money on the medium’s materials and future psychic readings.)

But we don’t just validate statements subjectively by making them about ourselves; we can take anything that is vague and make it apply to what we want. The clearest example of this comes from the (supposed) prophet Michel Nostradamus, who made predictions that he himself admitted were intentionally vague. People love to read these things and think that Nostradamus was predicting the future, but the only way you can think this is if you subjectively validate the statements as accurate after the fact - that is, if you make them about what you want them to be about.

Take the quotation that begins this chapter. I found an internet meme that claims it is about 1986 - because of a February 18 Saturn/Mars conjunction, Haley’s comet on April 11, and the Chernobyl nuclear disaster on April 26. But I could just as easily make this about 2016. In 2016, Mars’s closest approach to Earth and that of Saturn were only four days apart, there was major drought in California, there were two major meteors seen in North America alone (on May 17 and June 2), for unknown reasons (“secret fires”) a giant wildfire broke out in Fort McMurray (in Alberta, Canada), and there was little rain, warm wind, wars and incursions in the Middle East (as there usually is). And with about 10 minute’s internet research, you could make this “prediction” apply to just about any year you wanted.

But it’s not just “internet scholars” who have this problem with Nostradamus’s predictions. The “experts” do too. Take this passage:

From the Orient shall emerge the African heart to trouble Hardie and the heirs of Romulus along with the Libyan fleet the temples of Malta and nearby Islands shall be deserted.

(Sharma 2001, 39)

Nostradamus scholar Erika Cheetham thinks that “Hardie” in lines 1-2 “refers to Henry IV. The man who troubles him from East [the Orient] is the Duke of Parma. Lines 3-4 refer to the siege of Malta.” Nostradamus scholar Henry Roberts, on the other hand, thinks this is a “remarkably prophetic description of the role of Emperor Haile Selassie, in World War II, who reconquered Ethiopia, in East Africa and sent an expedition to aid the Allied Cause, eventually defeating the Fascists of Italy, self-styled ‘Heirs of Romulus’” (see Schick and Vaughn 2014, 123).

Which is it? It’s neither. It’s so vague, you could make it about almost anything at all. If it was a real prediction, you could tell what event it was about before the event happened. If you can only tell what event a statement was predicting after an event happens, then it didn’t really predict the event. That’s retro-diction, not prediction. The passage isn’t really about any­thing - it’s just vague.

Although the subjective validation of Nostradamus’s “predictions” doesn’t fuel much else besides silly beliefs in the paranormal, falling prey to subjective validation can be much more costly. The same subjective validation “retro- diction” techniques are also used to interpret the prophecies of the Bible, like those that are supposedly in the Book of Revelation. And when Harold Camping convinced people, based on such readings of scripture, that the end of the world was going to occur in 2011, many people literally spent their life savings to help him spread the message (see Seidl 2011).

Wasting your money on psychics is one thing; but what would you do if you sold everything you owned based on someone’s subjective reading of scripture, sat and watched the news all day for news of the rapture, and then it didn’t happen? So be aware when subjectively evaluating statements for truth or meaning. Although you may occasionally get it right, more often than not you will be led astray by your tendency to read into things. More often than we realize, we apply statements to ourselves and make them say what we want them to say.

References

Carroll, Robert. 2015. “Forer Effect.” The Skeptic’s Dictionary, October 27. http:// skepdic.com/forer.html (accessed October 4, 2017).

Schick, Theodore, and Lewis Vaughn. 2014. How to Think about Weird Things: Critical Thinking for a New Age. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Seidl, Johnathon. 2011. “‘Judgment Day May 21, 2011’: Man Spends Life Savings Proclaiming End of Days.” The Blaze, May 16. http://www.theblaze.com/ stories∕2011∕05∕16∕judgement-day-may-21-2011-man-spends-life-savings- proclaming-end-of-days/ (accessed October 4, 2017).

Sharma, Ashok. 2001. Nostradamus and Prophecies of the Next Millennium. New Delhi: Diamon Pocket Book.

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Source: Arp R., Barbone S., Bruce M. (eds.). Bad arguments: 100 of the most important fallacies in Western philosophy. New York: Wiley-Blackwell,2018. — 450 p.. 2018

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