denialism
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /dɪˈnaɪ(j)əlɪzəm/
Noun
denialism (usually uncountable, plural denialisms)
- The practice of rejecting propositions which are strongly supported by scientific or historical evidence, and often of seeking to influence policy processes and outcomes accordingly.
- climate denialism
- vaccine denialism
- 2008 February 16, Paul Kelly, The Australian:
- At this point Rudd confronts a new denialism. Just as John Howard was wrong to deny the confessional value of the apology, many Laborites are wrong to deny the abject failures of past generation policies.
- 2018 August 3, Keith Kahn-Harris, “Denialism: what drives people to reject the truth”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
- Denialism is an expansion, an intensification, of denial. At root, denial and denialism are simply a subset of the many ways humans have developed to use language to deceive others and themselves. Denial can be as simple as refusing to accept that someone else is speaking truthfully.
- 2021 April 27, David A. Graham, “It’s Not Vaccine Hesitancy. It’s COVID-19 Denialism.”, in The Atlantic[2]:
- In other words, the pattern of resistance to the coronavirus vaccines looks less like COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and more like COVID-19 denialism.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
position of those who reject propositions that are strongly supported by scientific or historical evidence
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