Adam1 wrote:This article from Nate Hagens is the best explanation I've read to date.
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3178
It's long but worth the read.
Yeah it is long (100+ A4 pages with the comments plus loads of interesting looking links!) but I've read through first bit ( a mere 17 pages) and yes it's really interesting.
Although cognitive dissonance is usually applied to others I can now see how it might apply to peak aware folk too. For me the dissonance is between what I believe to be a very serious issue and the fact I'm not doing more preparation.
In terms of what I was suggesting at the start of this thread I guess cognitive load theory comes closest: "many people are just too cognitively taxed to take on much more", though it's not exactly the same.
There's also the 'recency effect': people tend to overweight the most recent data and stimuli they receive in their decision-making processes. For specialists, activists and those who read about peak oil on a regular basis concern is bound to be much higher. The mass media really has a responsibility here. There's just no connection made between the oil shock last year and the recession now.
Anyway great link, so thanks for that.