Uzigawa said:
zehydra said:
captainfluoxetine said:
Why would I want to question truth?
You have to know what truth is in order to question it, and in order to do know what it is, you have to ask yourself philosophical questions. There is no way around it.
why must i know what i question? wouldn't questioning it be the best way to learn of it? think of it like this, does a redneck stay out of politics cause they have no idea about it? hell no, they jump right in and say they're right, maybe the rednecks have the right idea, oh wait forgot about the whole total ignorance, ya, you might have a bit of a point there
That's the thing which my quote is about, the misunderstanding of the nature of doubt.
You see, today, we subscribe to Descartes' notion that doubt is the origin of wisdom - well, we don't, actually. We now think that doubt is the origin of knowledge, which is not what the man intended, and what Kierkegaard laments in
Fear and Trembling. These days, we do not even bother to know about things, as in actually acquiring a profound understanding of them, but we proceed to doubting, criticising, and "moving on" right away.
That is pretty much the root cause of most of the retardedness going on in every discourse today. People talk about politics believing that sound bites are the same as an opinion, while others talk about metaphysics or atheism without having read either the Bible or Nietzsche. In
Escapist terms, imagine a bunch of people talking about games that they've nev... well, just think about Roger Ebert or Jack Thompson. People respect, say, Yahtzee's views on games even though they may disagree with them (well, the more mature of us do) because he knows a lot about games, which is manifestly evident in his comments.
The sad thing is that today, and perversely in the fields which theoretically require the most preparation and thought (politics and metaphysics), it's precisely the most ignorant ones whose voices are the loudest.
Believing something to be 100% true when you don't have all the facts is easy. A child which doesn't know any adults besides its parents will assume that his father is the strongest man in the world. Empirical knowledge, however, will sooner or later dilute this view, and the more you try to hold on to it in the face of evidence to the contrary, themore childish you will look (a recenty published poll shows that republicans, when presented with evidence which obviously contradicts their beliefs, will basically stuff their ears, go "lalala" and become even further convinced of - whatever republicans believe, I guess, that health care is worse than making up reasons to invade countries and murder tens of thousands, I guess, and that Sarah Palin is a great politician).
For an American who has lived in Rome, Tokyo and Munich, who has been to the French Riviera and Tuscany, it is rather harder to suggest that "USA is #1!!!" than for someone who has never left Bumfuck, TX. For someone who has studied the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in detail, picking a side is much tougher than for someone who gets his "views" (such as they are) spoon-fed to him by Rush Limbaugh. When discussing religion, you can do so on the level of, say, Aquinas and Nietzsche, or you can do so on that of the Westboro Baptist Church and Sam Harris.
So, can I NOW get a tl;dr, or what?