The question
“Can an idea be right and wrong at the same time?” was put to ChatGPT, to which
it responded with, “An idea can be
perceived as right or wrong depending on the context and perspective of the
person evaluating it. For example, some people may believe in the idea of free
speech, while others may find that idea to be harmful and oppressive.
Additionally, an idea that is considered to be right in one context may be
considered wrong in another. In other words, what is considered ‘right’ or
‘wrong’ can change over time and across different cultures.”
I am
interested in the correlation between holding that an idea is right or wrong
and of one’s concept of truth. If what appears as being truth (or true) for a
person is also an idea, then logic suggests that it too will fluctuate according to the context and
perspective of the person evaluating it. Why do disputes arise between people,
particularly of differing cultures, as to who is ‘right’ and who is ‘in truth’? Do
these disputes arise because of a difference of ideas, pertaining as to
what constitutes morality or of upholding of ‘one’s values’? Or are these disputes even less complex than
that, in that people are simply fighting over available resources?
Emotionally,
any given prize is discerned through a perspective of need or want and which
the mind is interpreting as being one of necessity. Is that necessarily an indication
of one’s truth?
On
some level of what it means to be human, it is likely that we are capable of experiencing
a greater truth of our being than we are individually given to comprehend; rather
than of bringing us closer together, it is the ambiguity of this idea that is
stifled in the midst of a worldview of materialism.
It has
been popular in recent times to suggest that a schism exists between religion
and science. I do not see a schism but that they both persist with
trying to interpret life through differing schematics and language. Reality
doesn’t need to win votes.
In
its earliest formation, philosophy was guided by a ‘love of wisdom’. Its tenet was
‘the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality and existence; a
theory or attitude that acts as a guiding principle for behaviour’.The Renaissance revolutionised ideas about what humanity is able to experience of itself in
the world; the massive advances in the natural sciences of the early 19th
century brought about changes in ideas about knowledge and of what constitutes
progress in the world. Philosophy was inevitably going to become a casualty of
this ‘enthusiasm’, in that philosophers were encouraged to apply the ‘scientific
method’ (consisting in systematic observation, measurement, experiment and the
formulation, testing and modification of hypotheses) not only to their own
domain of thinking but to others. It was not simply that philosophy in itself
became specialised, but that it did so in accordance with an impetus
of how or where to apply ‘wisdom of thought’ in the world.
Positivism
is a philosophical school that holds that all genuine knowledge is either true
by definition or positive (meaning a posteriori facts derived by reason and
logic from sensory experience).
Auguste
Comte, the founder of modern positivism, was particularly influential in
advocating that the scientific method must replace metaphysics in the history
of thought. He first advocated the epistemological perspective of positivism in
a series of texts published between 1830 and 1842. He followed these with his
1844 work ‘A General View of Positivism’ which dealt chiefly with the physical
sciences already in existence but also emphasised the coming of social science.
Epistemology
is a branch of philosophy concerned with knowledge. It is derived from ancient
Greek ‘epistēmē’, meaning ‘knowledge, understanding, skill, scientific
knowledge and the English suffix –ology, meaning ‘the science or discipline
of..’. In 1854, the Scottish philosopher James Frederick Ferrier first used the
word epistemology. In the first section of his ‘Institutes of Metaphysics’ he
wrote: “This section of the science is
properly termed the Epistemology – the doctrine or theory of knowing, just as
ontology is the science of being… It answers the general question, ‘What is
knowing and the known? – or more shortly, ‘What is knowledge’?”
Another
offshoot of philosophy, that of ‘Pragmatism’, began in the United States in the
1870s. It has been attributed to the philosophers Charles Sanders Peirce,
William James and John Dewey. Pragmatism can be considered as a tradition that ‘considers
words and thought as tools and instruments for prediction, problem solving and
action and rejects the idea that the function of thought is to describe,
represent or mirror reality’. Indeed, pragmatists contend that the nature of
knowledge, language, concepts, meaning, belief and science are all best viewed
in terms of their practical uses and successes.
Arguably
then, the topic of philosophy together with the context in which it is considered, has given birth to a plethora of ideas about what is knowing, what
is known, what is knowledge, as well as how such insights can be appropriated into
the service of what is determined as being valid or useful, predominantly in a materialistic
way. It is unsurprising then, that this somewhat disciplined approach to thought
has meant that other ways of knowing such as intuition, introspection or religious
faith were to become increasingly rejected or considered meaningless.
Interestingly,
the philosopher Ferrier, as well as coining the word epistemology as representative
of the study of knowing and knowledge, devised the word ‘agnoiology’; this
refers to the theoretical study of the quality and conditions of ignorance and
in particular, what can be considered ‘unknowable’.
According
to Wikipedia, “Agnotology (formerly ‘agnatology’) was introduced in 1992 by
linguist and social historian Iain Boal at the request of Stanford University
professor Robert N. Proctor. The word is based on the Neoclassical Greek word ‘agnōsis (ἄγνωσις, 'not knowing'; cf.Attic Greek ἄγνωτος, 'unknown' and -logia
(-λογία). It refers to the study of deliberate, culturally induced ignorance or
doubt, typically to sell a product, influence opinion or win favour (particularly
through the publication of inaccurate or misleading data) or of where more
knowledge of a subject creates greater uncertainty.”
In Proctor’s book ‘The
Cancer Wars: How Politics Shapes What We Know and Don’t Know About Cancer’ is
the footnote: “Historians and philosophers
of science have tended to treat ignorance as an ever-expanding vacuum into
which knowledge is sucked – or even, as Johannes Kepler once put it, as the mother who must die for science to be born. Ignorance, though, is more complex than
this. It has a distinct and changing political geography that is often an
excellent indicator of the politics of knowledge. We need a political
agnotology to complement our political epistemologies.”
Did the classical
Greek philosophers explore their topic to further their quest as to
what constitutes a universal wisdom of thought so as to improve the human
condition? What a contrast then, if in the last couple of hundred years or so,
the science of mind and of what it means to be human has not only become quantified
but appropriated by lobbies and vested interests, whose goals have been in the
management of information and of language.
Most modern educational establishments excel at covering
set materials for students to digest and to be examined with regards to how
proficient said students have become in embedding the set materials into their cognitive
ability. Critique of some pillars of academic excellence can result in punitive
consequences, even more so if powerful establishments are relying heavily upon
donations from vested parties.
It has become generally accepted in today’s mechanistic worldview
that knowledge happens through time and it requires not only consensus but effort
and specialisation in order for progress (momentum) to occur. It is as if
Newton’s second law of motion (F=ma) in that net force is equal to mass times
acceleration is being put into effect.
In recent writings, I have been exploring the Greek myths
of Prometheus and Epimetheus as well as of my speculating on the roles of Theia,
Rhea and Cronus as relating to cycles (or aeons) of human consciousness on
Earth. I have considered the Egyptian Ogdoad and the myth of Osiris as being
representative of the generative capacities of the cosmos and beyond that of
the writings of Parmenides and of one’s being in relationship with truth.
How are these seemingly disparate interests related not
only to knowledge but are providing for a glimpse into the nature of time?
"Dialogue ~ 48"
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