Cavemonster
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2008
- Messages
- 6,701
I won't argue with that at all, but just because it's his invention doesn't mean it isn't partially true or that it won't convince people.
Yes, he did something wrong. We're talking about a President who has broken a myriad of laws and has suffered no consequences. Campaign finance, paying off fines, even clear misconduct regarding investigations into the Trump University.
And? As bad as it sucks to say, it really doesn't appear anyone in government or in a position to do anything about it really gives a ****.
Forgive me, I'm going to go on a little digression, hopefully my point will be clear by the end.
Years ago I was one of those really annoying Dawkins fan atheists. And I happen to be working a job where I was on the road, sharing a hotel room with a very nice guy who happened to be an evangelical Christian who was very unconvinced of evolution among other things. We had a lot of conversations. I was really curious why he could hold beliefs that seemed so absurd to me and I wanted to know why and how that worked.
One night, I gave him a bunch of hypotheticals, asking if any kind of evidence would change his religious beliefs. What if they found rampant mistranslations from the original bible, what if they found a body still in the cave in the only place Jesus could have been buried, marked "Jesus". What if the heavens opened up and Ganesha came down, answered any question you could have about the universe and demonstrated the truth of hinduism to any standard you could ask. I threw in anything I could think of.
To each of these he answered "They would not change my belief".
I was flabberghasted. To me, belief was constructed around evidence, and ready to change with new evidence. That's sort of the core on knowing things, isn't it?
Then I thought to ask, "What would change your belief?" And he answered that if anything bad happened to his son, he would have to question his beliefs.
I was flabberghasted again. Bad things happen to children every day. Bad things happen to Christian children every day. Bad things had happened to the children of his christian friends."Something happening to my kid" seemed like a totally illogical basis for believing facts about the universe, but there it was.
And over the years, I've seen it again and again. People who seemed totally dug in and immune to grand canyon's worth of evidence, open to turning on a dime based on things that did not seem to be epistemologically relevant to me. Even moreso than my religious co-worker, I've seen people who seemed dug in ACTUALLY change their views based on a changed choice of word, a new (but seemingly to me identical) example. It's not too rare that I see someone change their mind over something seemingly irrelevant and I think "That's what changed your view?".
Now if we knew the magic key for Trump's supporters to see their emperor isn't wearing any clothes, that would be great.
But the two things I do know are that it isn't impossible (at least for some of them) and if it comes it will probably not be something we rationally see as meaningfully different from something they've heard a million times before.
