On Conspiracy Theory

Volume 12|Issue 47| Winter 2024 |Articles

Abstract

This paper is a study of Conspiracy Theory, the theory according to which the causes which explain the occurrence of many events and phenomena are not the officially advertised causes which the public media present us with; rather, the events and phenomena in question should be viewed as the work of agents and agencies that operate in secret in the service of projects that may or not be publicly known. The paper discusses the relation between theory and evidence and compares conspiracy theories to others, especially scientific theories. Two conclusions emerge. Firstly, a theory should not be rejected merely on the ground that it is a conspiracy theory. Secondly, most conspiracy theories do not deserve to be taken seriously because of the consequences which follow from their method of dealing with counter evidence. 

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Professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies who previously served as professor at Yarmouk University in Jordan, Birzeit University in Palestine, and Qatar University . His research focuses on the concept of identity, Islamic theology and philosophy, and contemporary Arab and Islamic thought. His latest book is titled Discourse of Dignity and Human Rights.

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