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Charlie Becker's avatar

This is a very interesting idea, and I think it's a useful framework for a lot of people. I think we agree on a lot, but here is where we diverge just a little: "Although we will never reach this ideal, what we are pursuing is a system of beliefs which can incorporate the whole of reality and still make sense."

I think we agree that no system of beliefs will ever incorporate all of reality, but I don't think any set of beliefs ever could, and I don't think that should be our aim. Undergirding this process there seems to be an implicit assumption that there is a capital T metaphysical true reality. I happen to believe that, but I think that we only arrive at it incidentally, individually. The truth is something we arrive at through inquiry, individually and in groups, by finding solutions to problems, because of our technical, ethical, and moral needs. I guess you could say when it comes to philosophy I am more of a Pragmatist, in that my view is beliefs and ideas are tools we use to navigate the world rather than a reflection of it.

Other than this pedantic (but nonetheless tectonic) distinction, I think we agree. Anyone who reads this essay would be immensely benefited by going through with this exercise. I actually used to teach a writing course where I had people start with something called "the worldview exercise," where they'd write as many statements as they could in the format of:

- "Every 'noun' should/shouldn't 'verb.'" with a focus on the nouns being a type of person.

(For example, "Every college student should study abroad at least once." "Everyone with aging parents should interview them on video." "Everyone with the power to vote should, even in protest.") I believe I adapted it from a book I read many years ago by Jeff Goins but I don't remember now. Then they circled the top five they felt most strongly about, then got into breakout groups with two other people and talked them out. It was great fun.

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Travis Monteleone's avatar

Awesome article. I think there's a ton of overlap between this approach and the epistemological approach of the American Pragmatists. Do you broadly agree with the Pragmatic approach and what do you think the differences are between your approach and theirs? Here's a link where I discuss the benefits of the Pragmatic approach vs the Cartesian approach:

https://open.substack.com/pub/travismonteleone/p/why-im-against-critical-thinking?r=1l2z5n&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

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