Ed Glosser
Scholar
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2014
- Messages
- 80
It's very important to remember that we're all stupid, that our minds play tricks on us, that our senses and memories are unreliable.
I bet you wouldn't say that if I had come to the same conclusions as you, though. I've learned over the years that when scientists and skeptics say "we're stupid", or "humans" are stupid, they really mean "other people are stupid".
To give you an idea of the scale of the problem, here's a list of some of the more common and better-understood flaws in human reasoning:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases
Skeptics always assume that believers never saw a list of cognitive biases, just like woos believe skeptics would be pursuaded if they only saw this or that documentary or (newspaper article about a) research paper.
But, alright. Thank you.
We have to constantly be on guard against these problems to make progress. That's what science is all about.
Yes, but science is not what life is all about. If I have to choose between truth and the beliefs of a scientific community that can't acknowledge that it even has beliefs, it's not even a choice.