Sorry, I find 'humility' irrelevant to being "careful about our claims". Any philosopher would tell you that being careful about making a claim has to do with being careful about becoming dogmatic about anything. A humble person can be dogmatic in belief. These two qualities aren't exclusive. Hence, a humble rationalist could very well be dogmatic by explaining that arrogance lies in rejecting reason as the ultimate test of truth.Shouldn't we be more humble about our beliefs given the evidence of the past, and given what we know will inevitably change in the future. Compare what we know, to what we don't know. The gulf is so vast it makes me wonder why we are so dogmatic about science, religion, politics, and a whole array of other subjects. Obviously some areas of study are more prone to rationality, and others are more prone to irrationality, but still it seems that we need to be careful about our claims. — Sam26
It depends on whether one is a layperson or an expert in the field. As a layperson, would you drive across a bridge that 97% of structural engineers told you would collapse if you did? Most people wouldn't, but these same people often reject 97% of climate scientists. If you believe in science, and are not an expert in the field, then you have to go along with the scientific orthodox view. As a lay person you just lack the knowledge to justify a contrary opinion. — LD Saunders
Just how wedded should we be to a particular view point? Another way to ask the question, just how dogmatic should we be about what we believe? Even in science what's considered knowledge at one point in history, will turn out to be overturned at a future point. What would our science look like to those who are alive 1000 years from now, or 20,000 years from now? This is not to say that we can't make claims to knowledge given our current methodologies, but when you look at knowledge in the broad sense, it makes you wonder why people are so dogmatic about what they believe. — Sam26
suspension of judgement about what is not evident — Wayfarer
It depends on whether one is a layperson or an expert in the field. As a layperson, would you drive across a bridge that 97% of structural engineers told you would collapse if you did? Most people wouldn't, but these same people often reject 97% of climate scientists. If you believe in science, and are not an expert in the field, then you have to go along with the scientific orthodox view. As a lay person you just lack the knowledge to justify a contrary opinion. — LD Saunders
Just how wedded should we be to a particular view point? Another way to ask the question, just how dogmatic should we be about what we believe? — Sam26
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.