Very radical Centrist. Except possibly the part about NOT being condescending 
:-)

https://streetepistemology.com/publications/street_epistemology_the_basics

Street Epistemology: The Basics


Introduction

This article is a brief outline on the basics of Street Epistemology. For more 
detail, see the 40-page "Complete Street Epistemology Guide: How to Talk About 
Beliefs".

The term "Street Epistemology" refers to a conversational technique introduced 
in 2013 by Dr. Peter. Boghossian, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Portland 
State University. It is a more productive and positive alternative to debates 
and arguments. A growing number of people worldwide have found value in the 
technique and are adopting it in their conversations with others about 
extraordinary (mostly supernatural and/or religious) claims.

The goal of street epistemology is to guide people into engaging their critical 
thinking skills and applying them to their own beliefs about the world. Street 
Epistemology is about teaching the most fundamental features of critical 
thought. It's about helping people recognize the value of skepticism and the 
scientific method. It's about illuminating the distinction between beliefs 
about the universe and the objective truth of the universe.

Following is a step-by-step description of how a street epistemology encounter 
typically proceeds. In addition to "street epistemology" (the technique), the 
abbreviation "SE" will stand for "street epistemologist", or the person 
practicing SE (you). Your dialogue partner will be referred to as your 
"interlocutor" (a fancy word meaning "a person participating in a dialogue").

SE works best in one-on-one conversations where both participants can apply 
their full attention to what the other is trying to say. Although direct, 
real-world encounters are most efficient, people are also experimenting 
actively with other mediums such as video-chat and online text forums with some 
success.

Step 1: Build rapport with your interlocutor

Build rapport with your interlocutor before getting deep into dialogue. Try to 
find something that you have in common. Taking the time to do this cuts through 
much of our natural, instinctive, anxiety about immediately engaging with a 
stranger.

Step 2: Identify the claim

You may already know what your interlocutor's claim is. For example, you may 
have initiated the discussion because you overheard them say that they believe 
in UFOs. Or, if you are actively looking to practice SE on anyone and any 
subject, this step may involve idle chit-chat with the hope of chancing upon a 
worthwhile claim. Most people who practice SE are focused on religious claims, 
so a common claim is something like, "God is real and the Bible is true".

Step 3: Confirm the claim

Confirm that you have understood your interlocutor correctly by summarizing and 
repeating their claim back to them. Don't continue until you are both sure that 
you understand it clearly. If necessary, write down the claim so that you can 
both refer to it if the conversation goes off track.

For example, you might ask, "Do I understand correctly that you believe God is 
a real entity and that the things written in the Bible are truly the word of 
God?"

Step 4: Clarify definitions

If there are any words that are ambiguous (or potentially so) this would be a 
good time to nail them down with your interlocutor. For example, sort out what 
you will both mean when you use the word "God" or the word "true".

Clarifying definitions is something that you may have to do multiple times as 
the talk progresses should it become apparent that you're using words 
differently.

Step 5: Identify a confidence level

Ask your interlocutor how confident they are that their claim or belief is 
true. If possible, have them put a number on it. If they are not willing or 
able to quantify it, accept whatever they give you and note that as their 
"initial confidence level". For example, "How confident are you that this God 
is real on a scale of 0 to 100?"

Note: The confidence scale is just a way of judging for yourself how much 
effect your efforts are having. It is optional and not an integral part of SE. 
Don't persist, as doing so may annoy your interlocutor and be counterproductive.

Step 6: Identify the method used to arrive at confidence level

Ask your interlocutor how they have determined that their belief is true, or 
how they've arrived at their stated confidence level. They may provide multiple 
reasons. Try to focus on just one or two, ideally those that contribute the 
most to their confidence. Once you've settled on a primary reason or method, 
stay focused on that through the rest of the talk.

For example, you may settle on "a powerful personal experience" as their 
primary reason for believing that God is real.

Step 7: Ask questions that reveal the reliability of the method

Your main tools here are the Socratic method, the outsider test of faith (OTF), 
and questions that revolve around the falsifiability of their claims. Ask 
questions that, when answered, lead to a contradiction of your interlocutor's 
assumptions or hypotheses.

For example, you might ask, "If a Hindu woman had a similarly powerful personal 
experience that convinced her that Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva were real, would 
that be good evidence that she was correct?"

Step 8: Listen, summarize, question, watch, repeat

Listen

Listen to your interlocutor closely. Look at them directly and try to 
understand what they are attempting to convey without getting hung up on their 
exact word choices.

Summarize

Repeat what you think your interlocutor is trying to communicate and verify 
with them that you've understood them correctly. It's important that they feel 
like they've been heard. It proves that you are being attentive and taking 
their beliefs seriously.

For example, "It sounds like what you are saying is [........]; Do I have that 
right?"

Question

Construct more socratic questions that directly apply to the epistemology they 
are using (see Socratic Method on Wikipedia)

Watch

Watch for those special moments where your interlocutor stops to "think". This 
is often betrayed by the act of looking up at the ceiling, clearly trying to 
sort through things in their head. It's important to detect these "aporias" and 
allow the silence to continue uninterrupted until the interlocutor speaks.

Aporias are signs that you are doing SE right! They may even mark the best time 
to end your talk as your interlocutor may be left with those thoughts and 
questions echoing in their mind as they continue their day.

Step 9: Wrap up the conversation

If your interlocutor previously offered their confidence level, ask them again 
as you wrap up. This can help you judge whether your dialogue had an immediate 
effect.

For example, "Given the things we've talked about, do you think your confidence 
level has changed? Do you still feel that 100% is accurate?"

Step 10: Part company

What success looks like:

The IL feels that the exchange was enjoyable, positive, valuable, etc.
You successfully induced at least one instance of aporia in the interlocutor.
Both parties express a desire to talk again.
A marked change in your interlocutor's self reported level of certainty.
What failure looks like:

Arguing and raised voices
Either party feeling frustration
Either party feeling unheard or misunderstood.
Either party regretting having had the conversation.
Rules of Thumb

Pay close attention to your own demeanor. If your words, body language, or tone 
of voice betray even a small amount of condescension, your interlocutor will 
recognize this and be justified in reacting negatively to it. If your goal is 
only to "win", and you don't genuinely respect your interlocutor (even if you 
don't respect their beliefs), then SE might not be right for you.

Don't get pulled into the weeds. Most people new to SE struggle to avoid being 
sidetracked when they hear clearly false, or unsupportable claims. They 
reflexively react to them by presenting opposing evidence or arguments. When 
you do this, you've gone off the rails. It's not a disaster as you can just 
drop the point and get back on track, but it's normal to struggle with this 
through many talks before you feel comfortable ignoring these things and 
staying focused on epistemology.

Don't allow frustration to overwhelm you. Everyone is different. For some 
people this may be a big challenge but SE requires that you maintain your 
composure or it's really not SE.

Want to learn more?

For even more on how to conduct a dialogue, see the "Complete Street 
Epistemology Guide: How to Talk About Beliefs".

See http://streetepistemology.com for information about SE, including links to 
blog articles, videos, tutorials, forums, apps, social media, helpful documents 
and diagrams.

----

J. Hitchens

Feb 2016

All blog posts represent the views of the author(s) and not necessarily those 
of the Street Epistemology community at large or the publishers of this website.


Sent from my iPhone

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