- Registrado
- 20 de Dic, 2022
Some time ago I watched a video that was rather uninteresting at face value:
TL;DW: guy compares volume of a sphere to volume of a cube. Sphere is a smaller ratio of the cube's volume than he expected. He concludes the sphere formula must be wrong and proudly posts his findings on Reddit where he gets mocked for being retarded.
I'm not going to bore you with the details of what this guy did. The point is he took a pretty basic geometry formula, compared it to another formula, and came to some surprising and unintuitive results. This is commendable. It is, quite literally, "doing your own research." But what makes all the difference is what you do with these kinds of findings.
The normie/NPC route is to accept what the textbook says at face value. Don't trust you lying eyes, it's in the textbook so it must be true. It's all well and good to have a degree of contempt for these kinds of people. It reflects a lack of curiosity. It's knowing without understanding. It's blind trust in authority.
Even dumber, though, is to outright reject what the textbook says because it "feels wrong." And this is fundamentally what most conspiracy theories seem to come down to. They latch onto a perceived contradiction in the default explanation and, rather than asking sincere questions in hopes of finding a resolution, they thickheadedly use it as a cudgel under false confidence that there is no resolution to be found. Any attempts to explain the contradiction away are disregarded as pilpul.
The guy who I'm using as a vehicle to explain this idea was so confident in his own intuitions that he wouldn't listen to anyone telling him why he's wrong. Those people are being "closed minded" while he's the one thinking critically and "just asking questions." And he made an ass of himself in the process.
Of course, the correct way to go about this sort of thing is to ask the questions. But instead of treating these questions as some sort of "gotcha," be genuinely open minded to the answers given. Sometimes reality doesn't match your intuitions. Your first priority should be to shift your intuitions to match reality.
The normie/NPC route is to accept what the textbook says at face value. Don't trust you lying eyes, it's in the textbook so it must be true. It's all well and good to have a degree of contempt for these kinds of people. It reflects a lack of curiosity. It's knowing without understanding. It's blind trust in authority.
Even dumber, though, is to outright reject what the textbook says because it "feels wrong." And this is fundamentally what most conspiracy theories seem to come down to. They latch onto a perceived contradiction in the default explanation and, rather than asking sincere questions in hopes of finding a resolution, they thickheadedly use it as a cudgel under false confidence that there is no resolution to be found. Any attempts to explain the contradiction away are disregarded as pilpul.
The guy who I'm using as a vehicle to explain this idea was so confident in his own intuitions that he wouldn't listen to anyone telling him why he's wrong. Those people are being "closed minded" while he's the one thinking critically and "just asking questions." And he made an ass of himself in the process.
Of course, the correct way to go about this sort of thing is to ask the questions. But instead of treating these questions as some sort of "gotcha," be genuinely open minded to the answers given. Sometimes reality doesn't match your intuitions. Your first priority should be to shift your intuitions to match reality.