The problem here is truth-as-belief never "took hold"...
That gave me a nice chuckle... out loud even.
We can certainly learn something about a person by virtue of paying attention to whether or not they follow the same standards that they expect others to meet.
The lady doth protest too loudly.
[...] unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true — Sagan
Quote seemed relevant to the thread, e.g.
[...] unable to distinguish between what feels good and what's true
— Sagan
Sagan got it. :)
A society in which brute facts (using Searle's terminology, see my last post)) are ignored will almost inevitably fail. Brute facts are unforgiving.
A society that ignores social facts? Social facts function because we make them function. If social facts are subject to too much flux, they fail. If they are denied, they fail.
At best, denial of social facts might lead to social change. — Banno
This was brought home to me quite clearly after having a few discussions with those who used the term 'fake news' unironically. If you actually talk to these people, it's quite clear that 'fake news' has nothing or very little to do with 'news that is not factual'. It simply has to do with 'news they don't like/does not represent their worldview'. 'Fake' in the phrase 'fake news' quite literally does not mean what you or I mean when we say 'fake' (i.e. unture, unfactual). It means something else entirely (thus liberals who reply that such and such news story really is true miss the point entirely).
Merriam-Webster has examples going back to 1890.
"Because of this proclivity for that oxymoronic guff he calls “truthful hyperbole,” Trump is frequently accused of being a serial liar. But this is not quite right. For one thing, it misunderstands what lies and bullshit are, and who Trump is. In On Bullshit, the philosopher Harry Frankfurt tells us that the difference between the liar and the bullshitter is that the liar is deliberately trying to tell us something he knows to be false. The bullshitter, on the other hand, simply does not care whether what he says is true or false. He will say whatever is necessary to persuade his audience. That means it will include a mixture of truth and falsehood. The bullshitter may even end up saying a lot of true things. But he doesn’t say them because they’re true, he says them because they work.
Donald Trump is a bullshitter. He is best classified as a bullshitter rather than a liar because he himself does not believe he is issuing falsehoods. He doesn’t necessarily think that he’s telling the truth either. What he does is find the words that will produce the effect required at any given time; he finds the most effective promotional tool. Some- times these things are lies. Sometimes they are not. But Trump’s intention is produce consequences rather than either to deceive or enlighten. Trump will feed you whatever bullshit it takes to get your money or your vote." — Trump Anatomy of a Monstrosity by Nathan Robinson
↪Thanatos Sand I'm with you there, but neoliberal liberal/centrism still has a sizable gap from the Extreme Right politics of the Republican Party, it's just that the gap is a lot narrower than what most people think. But I would still say MSNBC still very different from Fox. — Saphsin
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