In theory, changing your mind when presented with good evidence is a sign of intelligence. In practice, it is one of the hardest things people do, and the reasons why are more structural than personal.
Researchers who study belief revision have documented a consistent pattern: people evaluate new evidence differently depending on whether it supports or contradicts what they already believe. Evidence supporting existing beliefs gets accepted at face value. Evidence contradicting existing beliefs gets scrutinized for flaws. This asymmetry is not unique to any political group or education level. It shows up across the ideological spectrum, in lab settings, and in the wild.
The phenomenon has a name: confirmation bias. What makes it more than a casual observation is the extent to which it operates automatically and below conscious awareness. Most people do not feel like they are selectively evaluating evidence. They feel like they are simply weighing information and coming to reasonable conclusions. The bias is invisible to the person experiencing it.

Identity compounds the problem. For many contested beliefs, holding the belief is not just a factual position. It is an affiliation signal. Believing what your political community believes, what your religious community believes, what your professional community believes, marks you as a member in good standing. Updating a belief in response to outside evidence can feel like a betrayal of the group. The social cost of changing your mind is real and often underestimated.
This creates what researchers call belief perseverance: the tendency for beliefs to remain stable even after the evidence that originally supported them has been discredited. In a famous set of experiments, participants who were shown fake evidence for a claim, then told the evidence was fabricated, continued to endorse the claim at rates higher than a control group that had never seen the evidence. The belief formed on false evidence outlived the evidence itself.
Cognitura finds that the critical variable is often not the quality of the evidence. It is the social and emotional context in which the evidence is received. People update more readily when the evidence comes from a source they trust and identify with, when they do not feel publicly committed to the existing position, and when the update does not require repudiating their social group.
This has direct implications for anyone who wants to change someone’s mind, whether in a personal conversation, a public communication context, or their own private reasoning. Confrontation rarely works. Providing evidence in a context where the person feels attacked or judged typically produces defensiveness rather than openness. Conversations that allow someone to update gradually, without requiring a dramatic public reversal, are more effective than those demanding immediate acknowledgment of error.
The same logic applies internally. Being genuinely open to changing your own mind requires creating the conditions for it: actively seeking out the strongest versions of views you disagree with, maintaining private space to update before you have to defend a position publicly, and separating your identity from your beliefs enough that updating the belief does not feel like losing yourself.
None of this is easy. But the alternative, holding beliefs regardless of evidence because changing them feels threatening, produces a picture of the world that drifts progressively further from reality.

