Delight Springs

Friday, May 5, 2023

The Ethics of Belief

The Great English Mathematician and Philosopher William Kingdon Clifford on the Discipline of Doubt and How We Can Trust a Truth – The Marginalian
BY MARIA POPOVA

"The confidence people have in their beliefs is not a measure of the quality of evidence but of the coherence of the story that the mind has managed to construct," Nobel-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman observed in summarizing his pioneering behavioral psychology studies of how and why our minds mislead us. And yet our beliefs are the compass by which we navigate the landscape of reality, steering our actions and thus shaping our impact on that very reality. The great physicist David Bohm captured this inescapable dependency memorably: "Reality is what we take to be true. What we take to be true is what we believe… What we believe determines what we take to be true."

How, then, do we align our beliefs with truth rather than illusion, so that we may perceive the most accurate representation of reality of which the human mind is capable, in turn guiding our actions toward noble and constructive ends?

That's what the English mathematician and philosopher William Kingdon Clifford (May 4, 1845–March 3, 1879) explored with uncommon insight and rhetorical elegance nearly a century and a half before the golden age of "alternative facts."
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https://www.themarginalian.org/2017/04/14/the-ethics-of-belief-william-kingdon-clifford/

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