certainty

Apr. 23rd, 2006 08:45 am
miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
[personal profile] miriam_e
It seems to me that to believe in something is to become certain that thing is correct. But certainty is a strange thing. It is a little like trying to trap the wind in a metal box -- the minute you do, it is no longer the wind. The act of believing, driven by this desire for certainty, almost guarantees wrongness. Human knowledge of the real world constantly changes and refines. The only way to be even close to genuine understanding is to always seek it as information blows restlessly about you -- enjoy the wind for what it is.

Don't mistake that for relativism though. Relativism is the opposite to genuine truth, and supposes that any old belief is as good as any other and that people can settle for whatever "truth" suits them. It is a huge mistake. It gives up on real knowledge.

Date: 2006-04-23 01:55 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gillen.livejournal.com
And yet, something is correct - and it's the same thing that was correct yesterday. Human opinion changes and in some isolated cases becomes actual knowledge. Belief in changeable things is mistaken. Belief in the adaptable things is fine so long as one's belief is similarly adabtable. Belief in the unchanging things is not only acceptable, but necessary.

Date: 2006-04-23 02:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] miriam-e.livejournal.com
Sure. Something is correct.
Depending on what we think we understood it to be, it might be the same thing as yesterday, but it is a bit hard to know for sure. Our knowledge accumulates as we discard (mostly) mistaken beliefs. As our knowledge grows it is no guarantee of being correct. (The epicyclic movements of planets being seen as wheels within wheels are a great example of that.)

Belief in unchanging things can be convenient for many people which is no big problem if those things really don't change, but if they do alter then it causes terrible problems. The difficulty is in working out what is changeable and what isn't. In reality we can never truly know.

The best way is to stop looking for false certainty and simply go with the best data for now. It is tremendously freeing. Many people think "question everything" is terrifying, but it is exhilarating -- it breathes life into the world and blows the dust and cobwebs off.

Date: 2006-04-23 02:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gillen.livejournal.com
] As our knowledge grows it is no guarantee of being correct.

I'm working from a position that says if it isn't correct, it isn't knowledge but rather false opinion. If it is correct it may still not be knowledge, but only true opinion... it all depends on whether your reason for believing it to be true is the same reason that it actually is true.

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