David Sims wrote:There is a branch of philosophy called "epistemology." An epistemology is a rationale by which someone claims to have knowledge, or to know truth. Epistemology isn't what you believe to be true. It is, instead, how you justify your claims for knowing what the truth is.
Another branch of philosophy is "ontology" which is devoted to the study of being. Some of us are concerned that the Western separation of these fields may lead us into a condition of knowing more and more about less and less, which could, and to a certain extent already has, produced a race of idiot savants.
Every group holding to a dogma has, as part of that dogma, the belief that they are infallibly and with utter certitude correct in holding to that dogma. The circularity of that reasoning, and hence the logical invalidity of it, however obvious it might be to others, is lost on them. A good example is the way in which Christians believe that they're going to Heaven, but nobody else is. Most of the time, this sort of attitude is pure presumption. However, there can be exceptions. Sometimes one group's point of view is right about something, while all of the other groups are wrong.
The primal use of the word "every" in the foregoing description gives me cause for wariness. It appears that Aryans in ancient India believed in the human potential for convergence "being" and "knowing" and had an entire cast of people devoted to it as the highest of cultural (racial?) pursuits. I suppose it is likely that they, or one among their number was considered the embodiment of infallibility, but this, while not without risk, because it is a living being and not a static dogma, is a horse of different color.
Christians say that the New Testament is God’s word on certain matters, such as what happens to people after they die, and the conditions for having good Afterlife circumstances rather than poor ones. But someone of a different religion will disagree, and I don’t see how aligning my thinking with the beliefs most common in my native land is a valid way of answering metaphysical questions.
Truth is not something that authority can create by decree.
Truth is not something that you can find by the method of voting on what the truth is.
Paradoxically, empiricism may lead us into this very condition. By denying the possibility of the human embodiment of a convergence of knowing and being, it implicitly relativizes human beings and their relative knowings.
There’s another, and a better, way to find truth. Use an empirical method, such as the scientific method. It might take a while to work, but when it does work, it works for everybody. Anyone with the intelligence and the material prerequisites can do the same research, carry out the same experiments, get the same results, and usually reach the same set of conclusions about what the truth is. You might need a microscope, a telescope, or a chemical laboratory. But you won’t need a priest.
It might also be said that the person behind the microscope becomes the priest at that point.
Because, really, there is no "my truth" and "your truth" and "their truth." There is only the truth. And opinion is either in accordance with the truth, or else it's simply wrong. The only question worth arguing is: How do you know when a method for seeking the truth actually does succeed in finding it?
Objectivism is certainly the paramount method for evaluating knowledge of relative truths and falsities, but if there is a potential for convergence of being and knowing in absolute truth it is destined to miss it for lack of awareness of being.
You know that a method for seeking truth works when it can, really can, cause a light to spring forth and banish darkness. Not an imaginary light, such as a delusional fanatic might pretend to see, but a real light that can show anyone with normally functioning eyes the way through an unfamiliar and otherwise dark place. You know that a method for seeking truth works when it can, really can, heal the sick. Or when it can reveal what would have gone unnoticed because of distance or smallness, or for some other reason. Or when it can enable people to communicate with each other across thousands, or even millions, of miles.
Not only
can we transmit our science and technology across the planet, we
have transmitted our science and technology across the planet, and it may well be our undoing.
In summary, you know that a method for seeking truth works when it has a history of giving to people powers that they did not have before.
Valid methods for seeking truth do this because useful truths are a subset of all truths, and it is a subset in which people have a particular interest and to which they devote a considerable amount of their time. Any efficacious method for pursuing truth, used by human beings, will uncover a significant proportion of useful truths over time.
Useful to whom, and for what purpose?
The only method for seeking truth that actually works, so far as is known, is empiricism augmented by logic. In other words: science.
Religious metaphysics cause factionalism because God doesn't really exist, except as an abstraction that different groups of people have defined in different ways. But you will notice that the nature of gravity or the nature of electricity has not caused any similar factionalism. That's because the principles behind those forces were discovered by empirical methods, which give the same knowledge to Europeans, to Arabs, to Chinese, or to anyone else who uses them.
I suspect that the conflation of religion and metaphysics may be part and parcel of the West's demise, but am unprepared to develop and expound that possibility at this point.
Western empiricism has undoubtedly been good for Arabs and Chinese, not to mention Africans. My concern, and one that I know you share, is that the race responsible for the elevation of the value of knowing to a position of intellectual supremacy has suffered a corresponding diminution in the value of its being. Whether or not there is a causal relationship between these two phenomena is unknown to me, but inasmuch as I was never very good at science, and have yet to be elevated to Buddhahood, I don't mind, as a temporal assignment, pulling existential guard duty at the temple of your laboratory.