Usually both sides of arguments both have truth to them and the way to objective truth exists via trying to understand why both sides believe what they do.
Athiesm seems like the objective rational truth.
But why do billions of people believe in an invisible man in the sky?
What is the objective truth that we can learn from that?
> Athiesm seems like the objective rational truth.
> But why do billions of people believe in an invisible man in the sky?
There's no equivalency or even logical basis of comparison between these two statements. You could've said, "Oranges exist... But why do we have apples?" or "Some areas of the ocean have boats. But why do other areas not have boats?" and it would make about as much sense.
> What is the objective truth that we can learn from that?
That atheists exist but not everyone is an atheist? What would we by trying to learn from this sort of search for understanding?
"Why both sides believe what they do" is an enormously open-ended, completely ambiguous realm of thought. To drill down the logic behind this sort of question; "because the universe happened."
I'm pretty sure we understand why anti-vax people exist... The roads that lead there aren't that numerous. We also understand why they think we're wrong and they're right and vice versa. There's no "lack of understanding".
The real question is, "how do we break them free from irrational thought?" Is it even possible (en masse) when so many powerful entities depend on these people to stay irrational?
Could the likes of Fox News, OAN, and Newsmax even exist if everyone suddenly switched over to Vulkan-like logical thinking?
Actually, no: If the atheists are right then the theists are 100% wrong. There's no middle ground there or "truth to both sides."
If the theists are right... Which theists? Are we talking about polytheists? Single god but multiple instances of it (aka Ahura Mazda in Zoroastrianism)? Monotheism?
If any one of those are right then all the others are wrong. There's not really any ground that exists between these beliefs.
I think you're confused. The truth you're talking about exists outside of both of those contexts (theism VS atheism).
Religion is just a collection of beliefs that may or may not involve "an invisible man in the sky". Theism VS atheism are mostly orthogonal to the point you're trying to make.
It sounds like you're perhaps assuming the "middle" is a point in rational space. But maybe "middle" is best conceived as a point in possibility space -- it's the position over which someone must travel to ever get beside you in the future.
So allowing the middle to exist as valid (even if it isn't "truth") is perhaps important if the goal is for two groups to align more. Denying the middle position as "non-truth" is only helpful if one's goals have less to do with depolarization.
Anyhow, these are just some loosely held ideas. Maybe they're wrong :)
> Usually both sides of arguments both have truth to them and the way to objective truth exists via trying to understand why both sides believe what they do.
This is literally about two people arguing. It is actually very possible that one of them is right and other is wrong. Arguments are not just about abstract things.
> Denying the middle position as "non-truth" is only helpful if one's goals have less to do with depolarization.
Sure. Because "depolarization" while ignoring where it ends can end up in even worst place.
Plus, the "truth is in the middle" thing motivates actors on all sides to make up extreme lies. I don't mean just not caring about facts, but intentionally making them wrong. Because the more extremely I push, the more likely you will end up tilted toward my position.
And yes, I understand that this research is intentionally on topics of ambiguous morality, but that is because that served the protocol design: they didn't want to complicate the protocol with there being a "right" answer someone could look up. And increasingly in our public discourse, factual and moral disagreements are starting to share the same human qualities/challenges anyhow. Conversation about facts are increasingly like conversations about morality, and will be increasingly so as we become more networked.
> Arguments are not just about abstract things.
Believe me, I get that. I'm not overlooking that. But it doesn't matter to the divide that exists, and the steps required to repair it. And for me, the main value in even noticing a difference in perception is to repair it. Noting it for any of reason is just for posterity, and is pretty pointless imho.
Example: Someone you care to engage with believes their experience of the Mandela Effect[1] means they're hopping between dimensions. For the sake of stakes, pretend this is breaking apart this person's marriage. Pretend that giving up on them isn't something you want to do. There is a very clear factual truth here: the Mandela Effect makes no sense as anything more than human forgetfulness. But it's entirely possible that no amount of "bringing the truth" will change their mind, especially when they can easily hop on the internet and be validated by others who (for their own reasons) believe the same thing.
The more likely way to bring them to your reality is to be in closer relationship to their view. To ask questions about it. To make them feel like you're trying to understand and see what they do. Even if you believe 100% that they are wrong, you need to enter a mindset and perspective where they might be right.
That's all I mean. It's basically practicing humility about things you think you already know, because knowing something factual misses the whole process and serves no one. And honestly, my experience of building reflexes for acting this way, is that you actually do learn some things you thought you already knew. Maybe not about hopping dimensions, but about the underlying drives and motivations that animate the curious conclusions at the surface.
> maybe "middle" is best conceived as a point in possibility space -- it's the position over which someone must travel to ever get beside you in the future.
Physical motion is continuous, but change of ideas is not physical movement. The ex-Trotskyites that became the original neoconservatives did not move through a continuous path of intermediary ideologies on their left->right journey.
> Denying the middle position as "non-truth" is only helpful if one's goals have less to do with depolarization.
Why would depolarization be a goal independent of the specific consensus position achieved?
Blood keeps you alive, working hard is important, community makes you happier overall.
While being wrong that:
If you're sick it's because your blood is poisoned, you should work as hard as possible no matter what, you should always put community first.
This is an imperfect set of examples. A better set would look like a graph of interconnected beliefs that are hard to disentangle, each node being a statement that is true under certain circumstances but not others.
The idea that there is an absolute truth with no shades in between truth and falsity... that:
1) ignores the graph-theoretical nature of truth
2) is a form of psychological "splitting" (which is described in the article)
3) is basically a fundamentalism
When we decide to label someone's statements as wrong and act against them, we ought [;-)] to be aware of this and take ownership of that stance, not attribute our epistemic decision to absolutes.
It's not wrong to say that athiesm has truth and religion has truth.
Truth (and science) are iterative.
The world is infinitely complex and unless one is omniscient the only thing one can know for certain is that one is less wrong at the moment.
To think one has known an irrefutable truth is fanaticism and righteousness.
Lobotomy's won the Nobel prize when science roundly believed they were beneficial and I'm sure in the moment those experts thought they knew an irrefutable truth.
Athiesm seems like the objective rational truth.
But why do billions of people believe in an invisible man in the sky?
What is the objective truth that we can learn from that?