Having an inaccurate view of reality can easily kill
you. Winston Churchill was nearly killed in New York city because he "knew" cars drive on the left side of the road.
All but the tiniest portion of what we think we
know comes packaged and delivered to us from .. other realms that we
hardly know even exist. I don't mean some kind of supernatural
realms -- I just mean hundreds of thousands (at least) of academics,
reporters, teachers, government spokesmen, and sometimes friends,
family, and neighbors. Thousands of bits of "information" come pouring
into our world at almost any moment. It is more than we can absorb, and
much of it is wrong.
Still, I'm
sure that most of the people reading this are good enough at choosing
what to pay attention to and believe -- good enough, I mean, to
avoid dozens of possibilities of disaster every day.
Other
people are not so lucky. In North Korea, to take an extreme example,
people are kept in a starving, miserable condition primarily through the
manipulation of their view of reality. They think most of the rest of
the world is worse off, and wants to destroy them, so they cling to their leaders who control them with lies.
If
they stumble somehow into the world outside, they are lost and
disoriented. One result is a mini-encyclopedia of basic facts about the
rest of the world, written just for North Koreans, that is likely to be the first thing they receive if they somehow escape, or are among the lucky ones who get to travel to China. It is called "Welcome to the World", and generally comes on a PC thumb drive or memory card. (SOURCE LINK).
Certain philosophers (called "epistemologists") have long debated what we know and how we know it - but until recently with the unconscious unquestioned assumption that we act as individuals and must take the world just as we find it.
Today, I think we must ask "How can we adjust the world so we might
tell at least the most important truths from falsehoods? As an
ultra-simple metaphor, think of adjusting a telescope to bring something
into focus. It sounds presumptuous, but otherwise, I fear, we are
headed toward a brave new world of perfect counterfeiting of reality which will make it far more difficult to maintain our freedom.
I named this blog the Real
Truth Project because "The Truth Project" was already appropriated --
by TWO entities. One, a "Focus on the Family" project to promote a
"biblical world view"; the other advocating a sort of leftest paranoia
-- that the 9/11 attacks were faked by the U.S. government. They call
themselves "truthers". It is strange how the phrase the truth is made to serve one or another particular (often obsessive) idea, rather than suggesting the whole staggering business of making words reflect what is going on around us.
I have very little justification, to date, for calling this effort a "project". Much of it consists of refutations of deceptive anonymous political emails. A couple of posts might, however, give some sense of what I hope this could turn into:
"Practical Epistemology" (one of the first posts, but heavily revised in November 2011), and
"I'm Making Some Progress on "Knowledge in a Social World" Despite My Ridiculous Isolation"
Other blogs and projects I am working on:
* What Was the Cold War?
* Jacksonian Miscellanies
* Owning Our Democracy
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