This is quite subtle Oxford shit Lee - we are mere oiks - yet I like
the notion that we could better believe in what is true.

On 28 Jan, 17:20, Lee <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey Neil,
>
> Perhaps until we can answer the question, what is true?  We are all
> quite doomed!
>
> On 28 Jan, 00:04, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > How can we better believe what is true?   While it is of course useful
> > to seek and study relevant information, our minds are full of natural
> > tendencies to bias our beliefs via overconfidence, wishful thinking,
> > and so on.   Worse, our minds seem to have a natural tendency to
> > convince us that we are aware of and have adequately corrected for
> > such biases, when we have done no such thing.
>
> > There's a blog on this at Oxford University's Future of Humanity
> > Institute (easy to google).  Sad stuff on my brief scan, though I will
> > return.  The question seems key and I wondered whether we could do
> > better with it.  My own views include a notion of relativism that
> > recognises realism is implied and non-philosophic tropical fish
> > realism.  I won't bore on this in here - at a somewhat more practical
> > level I think we are in a plight that involves trauma and a need to
> > believe we can live more rationally and justly in public affairs.
> > This involves not using argument as a weapon and accepting some stuff
> > is intolerable.  I would see this as key to a future for humanity.
> > Obama is a bit of a hope here, but only if we can gather round.
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