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John's avatar

Fallibillism has a humility I find compelling.

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DW's avatar

I’ve also struggled with epistemology. It’s probably why some people think I never agree with anything they say. Mixing “figuring things out” with some real opinions and it probably doesn’t leave a lot of room for pat-on-the-back agreements. It probably gives off a disputatious temperament. (I don’t think I have one.)

Regarding this topic, I feel like “authority” has to play into it somehow. It seems the vast majority of what we claim is “knowledge” is because someone told us.

I’ve never been to Africa. But I believe it’s there because so many people have been, traversed it, mapped it, etc. It’s no good to say “Well you could go there and prove to yourself that it’s real.” Can I? How would I know I arrived? Maybe the plane took me somewhere else. I could travel myself, but then I’m trusting the maps that someone else drew up. Maybe I can’t trust the maps. I would need to draw my own maps; which would incidentally require me to rediscover—on my own—things like latitude and longitude and coordinate systems, which would lead to having to rediscover the curvature of the Earth (maybe it really is flat), and things of that nature. All of that still only gets one started. One would then need to move on to mapping the coastline, interior, etc and “discover” that the Serengeti really is in that particular spot.

The process descends into the ludicrous straight out of the gate. Each individual simply doesn’t have the lifespan or ability to do all that is required to “prove” for themselves so simple a thing. (It’s what I think feeds conspiracy theorists. There will never be evidence so strong that it cannot be discounted for some reason.)

I hope future installments will discuss authority to some extent.

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