Truth is the correspondence of the mind and reality.
Truth is the correspondence of the mind and reality.
From the Wikipedia: Sir Roger Penrose OM FRS (born 8 August 1931) is an English mathematical physicist and Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford and Emeritus Fellow of Wadham College. He has received a number of prizes and awards, including the 1988 Wolf Prize for physics which he shared with Stephen Hawking for their contributi- on to our understanding of the universe. He is renowned for his
work in mathematical physics, in particular his contributions to general relativity and cosmology. He is also a recreational mathematician and philosopher.Dr. Feser argues that metaphysical errors about the nature of the will angeability of the hu
1. Do I believe the experts?
a) No matter which expert on which
subject, I never suspend my judgment which means analyzing the facts at hand
and see if they make sense so that the action(s) I am going to take based on
those facts will be reasonable.
Ex.: I need
surgery. Question of life and death.
My judgment in every case with any
expert will be limited due to my limited knowledge, but I owe to myself to go
as far as I can. There is no question of questioning his technique, how could
I; but I can check to see if he has a good reputation for example.
In this case, if
possible I inquire if his previous patients were satisfied.
How long as he been
practicing?
Does he inspire
confidence when I talk to him? Etc. etc.
Then I make a decision
after I’ve done the best I could.
Ex.: I
listened to an expert on nuclear energy.
How much will it affect me personally? Not
immediately, I suppose but maybe in the long run, if not me, my descendants.
However if it is an
interest of mine, I will find out the pros and cons of many experts to compare
and at least have a general idea before I could give my opinion on the subject
one way or the other.
The immediate consequences
of me not “being right” would be negligible, so I will not worry about knowing
so little about the subject.
After all, I’m only
satisfying my curiosity as perhaps I’ll have to make a political decision in a
voting boot, later on.
Ex.: What
the expert says can be applied in my personal life.
Like: which way to set a ceiling fan
in the winter.
Does the info comes from
a ‘reliable’ source or is it simply something repeated so many times by
journalists or others?
Does it make sense when
I think about it in details?
If it does not make
sense, I have to know why it does not and be able to demonstrate that it does
not.
a)
Ceiling fan clock wise in winter I did not agree with.
See attached diagrams.
b)another one is when pressure washing
the side of a house
one should start from the bottom and finish at the top.
Common sense told
me right away that it could not be right.
Experimenting I
quickly discovered that the expert was wrong and that I was right.
I remember my father-in-law
saying that he had experimented, a very simple thing to do, and that one uses
much less water by having a shower.
So, I did my own experiment to make sure and found out that he was right.
Paul Feyerabend (1924-1994) was the enfant terrible of late 20th-century philosophy of science. He delighted in mischief, juxtaposing vast knowledge of science and its history with antics like egging on creationists, playing devil’s advocate for astrology, and calling for the “separation of science and state.”
He has nevertheless secured a place in the canon, because he is brilliant, extremely well-read, and funny—and his views, when correctly understood, are important and challenging. No doubt it helps that he is a man of the Left, despite saying things that were often criticized for giving aid and comfort to the religious Right.
Feyerabend was once labeled “the worst enemy of science” by the prestigious journal Nature. But even a casual reader can see that what Feyerabend actually opposed was scientism, the transformation of science into an ideology and of its practitioners into a secular priesthood.
[Well worth reading. I found this article very appropriate for our time.
Here are the last two paragraphs which might give you an incentive to read the whole thing.]
These developments illustrate the ways in which the practice of science can sometimes be arbitrary, dogmatic, authoritarian, politicized, blinkered, highly fallible, and destructive of other social values—just as Feyerabend warned. That does not entail that COVID-19 is not a serious problem (it is) or that the lockdown was not initially justifiable (it was). But expertise that does not acknowledge its own limitations takes from us as much as it gives, and irrationalism is never more dangerous than when clothed in rationalist drag.
Feyerabend’s last word on the subject should be our own: “The hardest task needs the lightest hand or else its completion will not lead to freedom but to a tyranny much worse than the one it replaces.”