I've thought about this a lot, and my conclusion is that truth is useful in a far more fundamental and long term sense - whereas the lie is short term, and implies costs when falsified. — counterpunch
Pardon me quoting myself for reference.
Logically yes, if the truthfulness is known but reality is rarely that way. We are presented with a barrage of information where we have to validate ourselves if they are truths or not. Aren't there believable lies and unbelievable truths? I guess my question is: can we know that we aren't believing in falsehoods? Can the liars you mention, be believing in falsehoods that they misinterpret as truths? — FlaccidDoor
*truthfulness is rarely known X
*lot of information / (nearest thing I got to a tick, weird right!)
*difficulty of validating information /
*credible lies /
*incredible truths /X - reality is incredible but truth has an appeal we recognise and gravitate toward.
*difficulty of validating information - again! no tick for you!
*misplaced piety /
Almost the whole gamut of epistemic implication. I'm impressed by the seemingly accidental concentration of philosophical themes - stuffed into such a short paragraph. I'm only disappointed you didn't also reach for the sceptical argument underlying utter epistemic relativism, and conclude by suggesting we can't actually
KNOW anything!
I don't accept truthfulness is rarely known. Rather, I think science now constitutes a highly valid and increasingly coherent understanding of the reality we inhabit - to which we ought pay attention if we'd rather continue inhabiting it. Emphasis on absolute certainty is a red herring. I would like to continue inhabiting earth. I'd like to belong to a species with a future, and faced with significant future challenges - I see an opportunity in the objective validity of science, to meet and overcome those challenges - and secure for our species a long and prosperous future. Should I not talk about it? I'm aware there are reasons that maybe I shouldn't; and that's why you haven't, and that's why we're almost certainly doomed.
It is a lot. Everything is. Reality is complex and entropic. That's why we need vast amounts of energy to spend, and we have it. It's there, and key to human survival. I've gone through a lot to reach that conclusion. Painfully aware of how difficult it is to get anything done, I've sought to identify the key log - and it is limitless clean energy. It's the most scientifically fundamental approach - and the greatest good for the least cost, with least disruption. I can imagine fossil fuel producers freaking out at the very idea, but I would argue more energy gives us more time and discretion in the short to mid term, and would be applied to create sustainable markets in the long term. Nothing in that argument is beyond the scope of our knowledge or the potential of our technology.
Validation! I'll do it myself if I have to. Just give me the money, and get out of the way. I'll hire the expertise and machinery and have at it. You might be better going with someone with a proven track record in project management; I'd certainly look to hire such a person. But give me the cash and in five years I'll give you a working prototype of a system that can be scaled all the way up to limitless clean electricity, that extracts atmospheric carbon and buries it by the megaton, and produces hydrogen fuel and fresh water in industrial amounts.
Credible lies. I'm not lying. Naively, I set out upon my philosophical journey wanting to know what's truly true, and I found something - I'm somewhat inadequate to describe. It could be likened to an old lever, overgrown and forgotten - that in face of impending challenges, and having considered the consequences - I eventually concluded I'm morally obligated to point out. I have asked myself if pointing out the existence of the lever is equivalent to pulling the lever myself, or being reckless as to whether the lever is pulled. I have asked myself if pointing out the existence of the lever might cause that which, I believe pulling the lever would prevent. I've asked myself if I might be wrong, and found I was, and backtracked and changed my mind - and thought about it all - all over again and again until, as far as I can tell I'm right. Why, in all that - would I lie?
Incredible truths is pretty much covered above.
Nil points for repeating yourself. In fact, one demerit.
And then there's misplaced piety. I don't doubt the piety of others, even if I believe it's misplaced, but rather, refine my proposal to one specific, scientifically fundamental key application of technology, necessary to a sustainable future - precisely to afford our ideological irrationalities. I presume too much to draw an analogy with Prometheus, but in parallel style - advocate bringing home the truth we can live with. I don't advocate truth with a capital T - but pulling the big truth lever in a pragmatic fashion. Science is a highly valid and coherent understanding of reality we can trust in, and in those terms - it's possible to drill for magma energy, and use that energy to avoid the impending catastrophe of our existence.