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posted by mrpg on Saturday May 05 2018, @05:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the not-flat-or-round-it-is-a-line dept.

Interesting bit to be found at The Conversation:

Speakers recently flew in from around (or perhaps, across?) the earth for a three-day event held in Birmingham: the UK's first ever public Flat Earth Convention. It was well attended, and wasn't just three days of speeches and YouTube clips (though, granted, there was a lot of this). There was also a lot of team-building, networking, debating, workshops – and scientific experiments.

Yes, flat earthers do seem to place a lot of emphasis and priority on scientific methods and, in particular, on observable facts. The weekend in no small part revolved around discussing and debating science, with lots of time spent running, planning, and reporting on the latest set of flat earth experiments and models. Indeed, as one presenter noted early on, flat earthers try to "look for multiple, verifiable evidence" and advised attendees to "always do your own research and accept you might be wrong".

While flat earthers seem to trust and support scientific methods, what they don't trust is scientists, and the established relationships between "power" and "knowledge". This relationship between power and knowledge has long been theorised by sociologists. By exploring this relationship, we can begin to understand why there is a swelling resurgence of flat earthers.


Original Submission

Interestingly enough, the author delves into philosophy, particularly the work of Michel Foucault, who, for those not familiar with him, traced the relations between knowledge and power, especially in The Archaeology of Knowledge.

In the 21st century, we are witnessing another important shift in both power and knowledge due to factors that include the increased public platforms afforded by social media. Knowledge is no longer centrally controlled and – as has been pointed out in the wake of Brexit – the age of the expert may be passing. Now, everybody has the power to create and share content. When Michael Gove, a leading proponent of Brexit, proclaimed: "I think the people of this country have had enough of experts", it would seem that he, in many ways, meant it.

Ah, that explains so much beyond Brexit! Alternative Knowledge!

And for those who will never read the entire article, bit of the take-away:

In many ways, a public meeting of flat earthers is a product and sign of our time; a reflection of our increasing distrust in scientific institutions, and the moves by power-holding institutions towards populism and emotions. In much the same way that Foucault reflected on what social outcasts could reveal about our social systems, there is a lot flat earthers can reveal to us about the current changing relationship between power and knowledge. And judging by the success of this UK event – and the large conventions planned in Canada and America this year – it seems the flat earth is going to be around for a while yet.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by zocalo on Saturday May 05 2018, @08:15PM (1 child)

    by zocalo (302) on Saturday May 05 2018, @08:15PM (#676148)
    The true believers would probably just say their inbound flight to the UK was one part of a circle/ellipse drawn on a flat plane and their outbound flight back home the other part. The rest (probably the majority) are almost certainly only in it for a few beers, a little socialising, and a laugh at the expense of those who don't realise that and try to disprove their increasingly elaborate reasoning why the world is flat. It's a global community; they have any number of ways of definitively proving/disproving their assertions just by using the power of the Internet and a little simultaneous collaboration, yet instead they come up with increasingly kooky ideas to explain away how it can be midnight on one part of flat plane and noon at another, etc. Why else would they opt for that approach, if not to wind up intellectuals who take themselves far too seriously?
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  • (Score: 2) by Magic Oddball on Saturday May 05 2018, @10:33PM

    by Magic Oddball (3847) on Saturday May 05 2018, @10:33PM (#676181) Journal

    According to one article I read recently, one of the more popular Flat-Earther theories about circumnavigation is that space/time is warped around the edge in a manner that creates a wrap-around effect identical to the one seen in Pac-Man.

    Seeing that brought to mind the old quote “if Pac-Man had affected us as kids, we'd all be running around in dark rooms, munching pills and listening to repetitive electronic music.” Apparently not everyone managed to avoid being 'affected' mentally by Pac–Man…