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Noam's avatar

How can you trust anything or anyone, when we no longer know how to trust? What is truth and how can we know who/what to trust?

I’ve asked this question many times across platforms, and have yet to see anything substantial come from it, including this article (love your work).

It’s not that you, me or others get it wrong, it’s that the concept of trust, comes from the truth. Truth is meant to be an absolute (proven, vetted, tested and confirmed without a doubt). Yet, 100% transparent and flexible, in the event, if and when, a new truth becomes available.

Certain truths won’t change, ie the laws of the universe and many concepts proven, vetted, and confirmed by science especially in the field of physics. But some truths, naturally will, as we learn, grow, test and experiment.

I remember sitting in an economics tutorial in Uni, we had a replacement lecturer in for the sesh, and one of the questions he asked was, “what is the only truth we have in the universe?”, or something along those lines. We grappled with it for over an hour. In the end, debating the answers and left even more confused, he suggested that the only truth- is the past.

That has always stuck with me. Does it help us move forward and answer the lingering question as we navigate this era of (mis)information becoming a weapon of control, all the lies and deceits, gaslighting et al.? Fuck no.

The COVID debacle, debunks pretty much all the points above as well as what we’d expect to be truth from the trusted sources, or those most qualified to speak the truth.

The world trusted blindly, only to find out later, we’ve been lied to and there is now evidence of deliberate deceit and misleading having taken place.

Spice that up further with how deep it went into the “trusted” establishment, whom were the experts and meant to have our best interests at heart. Not even talking about the US, try New Zealand where I am from and we can then see how it snowballs into what it became with everyone singing the same song.

It’s almost as if we experienced a live experimental parody of the movie “Don’t Look Up”. But we don’t see it for what it is, as we didn’t have the entire picture throughout (back to “the only truth is the past”).

The very folk who were shunned and labeled as tinfoil-hat-wearing-conspiracy-theorists, or those who refused et al., ended up pretty much spot on and as purveyors of “real truth”… Now you open up an even bigger head fuck of further information/truth, from said truth-sayers, and back to square one you go- as some of their other theories are, and put quite lightly, just a big no thanks- that’s too far...

We all love the concept of a person who is able to acknowledge when they aren’t sure and be transparent with their words, beliefs, and reasonings. It naturally promotes trust. Even better when they are able to say they got it wrong in hindsight.

But it’s not the case and “truth” proved to be deceit, deceit-betrayal, and real truth so far fetched from reality, we can no longer stick to the formula or trusting we were taught to, when we were young.

I believe this topic deserves far greater respect, research, insight and real debate in order to do justice to the word trust, let alone truth.

Thoughts?

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Rudolph Rigger's avatar

I think we also have to consider the context too.

In my field (physics) you'd get pretty near unanimity when discussing things like Newton's Laws. You get far less unanimity when discussing, say, interpretations of quantum mechanics.

Physics, in some sense, is actually 'easy'. There are relatively few fundamental laws - although working out the *consequences* of those laws can be very difficult and fraught with error. I don't think this 'safe' and well-established foundation carries over (fully) into other fields, such as medicine. The human body, and its biochemistry, is horrifically complex. I wouldn't *expect* anything like the same degree of unanimity and certainty - just on principle. And we've all seen many examples where medical 'experts' have got things disastrously wrong.

I think when someone has spent years gaining expertise in some field, they should certainly be *listened to*. But simply 'trusted'? No - not even in physics.

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