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posted by martyb on Thursday July 19 2018, @10:45PM   Printer-friendly
from the We-could-keep-this-up-forever dept.

Aeon has an interesting article on bullshit:

We live in the age of information, which means that we also live in the age of misinformation. Indeed, you have likely come across more bullshit so far this week than a normal person living 1,000 years ago would in their entire lifetime. If we were to add up every word in every scholarly piece of work published prior to the Enlightenment, this number would still pale in comparison with the number of words used to promulgate bullshit on the internet in the 21st century alone.

If you find your head nodding, start shaking it. I’m bullshitting you.

Ha! I knew it!

How could I possibly know how much bullshit you have come across this week? What if you’re reading this on a Sunday? Who is a ‘normal’ person living 1,000 years ago? And how could I know how much bullshit they had to deal with?

It was very easy to construct this bullshit. Once I set out to impress rather than inform, a burden was lifted from my shoulders and placed onto yours. My opening statements could very well be true, but we have no way of knowing. Their truth or falsity were irrelevant to me, the bullshitter.

[...] In his book, On Bullshit (2005), Frankfurt noted that ‘most people are rather confident of their ability to recognise bullshit and to avoid being taken in by it’. However, more than 98 per cent of our participants rated at least one item in our bullshit receptivity scales to be at least somewhat profound. We are not nearly as good at detecting bullshit as we think.

So, how might you – the reader – vaccinate yourself against it? For a non-spiritualist, it might be relatively easy to recognise when Chopra or Oz are concerned less with the truth than selling books or entertaining viewers. But think back to my opening paragraph. Bullshit is much harder to detect when we want to agree with it. The first and most important step is to recognise the limits of our own cognition. We must be humble about our ability to justify our own beliefs. These are the keys to adopting a critical mindset – which is our only hope in a world so full of bullshit.


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  • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Friday July 20 2018, @03:45AM (2 children)

    by Reziac (2489) on Friday July 20 2018, @03:45AM (#709783) Homepage

    My Node of Perversity pipes up with, "But can we trust the guy who took the measurements??"

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    And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by suburbanitemediocrity on Friday July 20 2018, @04:12AM

    by suburbanitemediocrity (6844) on Friday July 20 2018, @04:12AM (#709796)

    Never. Wait, always double check your sources and a little critical thinking can go a long way.

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    There are more stars in the sky than atoms in the universe.

  • (Score: 4, Informative) by captain normal on Friday July 20 2018, @04:42AM

    by captain normal (2205) on Friday July 20 2018, @04:42AM (#709807)

    Trust....but verify.

    --
    When life isn't going right, go left.