homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Conservative people in the US distrust science way more broadly than previously thought

Even chemistry gets side-eye now. Trust in science is crumbling across America's ideology.

Mihai Andrei
April 22, 2025 @ 11:48 am

share Share

Image via Wiki Commons.

If you thought conservatives distrusted climate science and gender studies but were fine with physics, think again. A sweeping new study reveals a much bleaker situation. Conservative Americans don’t just mistrust “controversial” science. They mistrust nearly all of it—across 35 disciplines, from anthropology to atomic physics.

And here’s the kicker: no quick-fix interventions—no curated messages, no handpicked conservative scientists—could shake that distrust.

Conservatives distrust all science, not just the “liberal” kind

“In America, but also in other countries, conservatives generally have lower trust in science,” says Bastiaan Rutjens, one of the study’s authors. This isn’t exactly news, but the extent of the distrust was stunning.

The study surveyed 7,800 Americans, asking them to rate their trust in scientists across 35 disciplines—from anthropology and sociology to physics and industrial chemistry. Participants also reported their political orientation, allowing the researchers to compare responses from self-identified conservatives and liberals.

You’d expect the biggest gaps in areas like climate science or social research; and you’d be right. “This is likely because findings in these fields often conflict with conservative beliefs, such as a free-market economy or conservative social policies,” says Rutjens.

But the fact that the same pattern holds for physics or biology? That’s new. It’s not just ideological rejection or political polarization, it’s a systemic problem.

Sometimes, you can intuitively see a link. Take, for instance, virologists. These were the 3rd most distrusted type of scientist by conservatives, relatively to liberals. That’s probably linked to the COVID-19 pandemic, where lockdowns, mask mandates, and vaccines became political topics (even though, fundamentally, they’re scientific).

But Food Scientist and Astrophysicist are also distrusted by conservatives. Data Scientist and Hydrologist were also distrusted, and it’s not clear why.

Trust gap between liberals and conservatives across scientific professions. Each point shows the difference in average trust (liberal minus conservative) for a specific profession, with 95% confidence intervals. Image from the study.

The trust gap was lowest for Mathematician, Zoologist, and Marine Biologist. But the bottom line is that, for every scientific profession, conservatives showed more distrust.

Researchers tried to find an easy fix. They couldn’t

The researchers tried five kinds of nudges—short interventions meant to make science more relatable or values-aligned. They tried messages aligning science with conservative values, showcasing right-leaning scientists, framing scientists as part of conservatives’ social ingroup, using moral language familiar to conservatives, and emphasizing the practical benefits of science. Despite these tailored approaches, none of the interventions significantly boosted trust.

Let’s put it this way. None of them worked. Let that sink in: even when science was dressed in red-state values and served on a silver platter, conservatives didn’t bite.

“This suggests that their distrust is deeply-rooted and not easily changed,” Rutjens concludes.

It’s not about how science is presented. It’s about what it represents—a threat, maybe, to certain moral or cultural frameworks.

This has serious implications

Science helps societies navigate complex challenges—pandemics, climate change, technological disruption. But when large swaths of the public see it as elite propaganda, the whole system strains.

Rutjens doesn’t sugarcoat it:

“Extreme things are happening in America right now. But even here in the Netherlands we are seeing unprecedented discussions being held around science, sometimes accompanied by significant distrust.”

If something doesn’t change, it can spell disaster. We’re already seeing some of these effects, from lower vaccination rates in Republican counties to book bans and a constant backlash against education. If this erosion of trust continues, it won’t just cripple policy—it will rot the foundation of democracy. In fact, this is exactly what we’re seeing in the US now.

The authors argue that longer, more personal efforts are needed—interventions that connect science to individuals’ lives in real, tangible ways.

“We need stronger interventions that make science truly personal. What can science contribute to your life, here and now?” Rutjens says.

But that’s easier said than done. You can’t turn a climate model into a sermon and you certainly can’t out-argue a worldview with pie charts.

And if the public’s trust is gone, it’s not just scientists who should be worried. It’s everyone.

The study “Political ideology and trust in scientists in the USA” was published in the journal Nature Human Behavior.

share Share

Meet the Indian Teen Who Can Add 100 Numbers in 30 Second and Broke 6 Guinness World Records for Mental Math

The Indian teenager is officially the world's fastest "human calculator".

NASA Captured a Supersonic Jet Breaking the Sound Barrier and the Image Is Unreal

The coolest thing about this flight is that there was no sonic boom.

NASA’s Curiosity Rover Spotted Driving Across Mars From Space for the First Time

An orbiter captured Curiosity mid-drive on the Red Planet.

Fully Driverless Trucks Hit Texas Highways (This Time With No Human Oversight)

Driverless trucks will haul freight in Texas without a human behind the wheel.

Scientists Rediscover a Lost Piece of Female Anatomy That May Play a Crucial Role in Fertility

Scientists reexamine a forgotten structure near the ovary and discover surprising functions

What's the best way to peel a boiled egg? A food scientist explains

With a few science-based tips, mangled eggs can become a thing of the past.

This Tiny 3D Printed Material is as Strong as Steel but as Light as Styrofoam

When 3D printing is combined with machine learning, magic happens at the nano scale.

This Solar-Powered Device Sucks CO2 From the Air—and Turns It Into Fuel

Researchers harness sunlight to convert CO2 into sustainable fuel.

A Woman Asked ChatGPT for a Palm Reading and It Flagged a Mole That Might Be Cancer

A viral TikTok recounts the story of a young woman who turned to ChatGPT for love advice but received an unsolicited medical advice instead.

This School Was Built from Sugarcane Waste. It Might Change Construction Forever

Bricks made from sugarcane waste have constructed a school in India — and are building new vision for construction.