How the most idealistic view ends up being more complex: examples |
Is simplistic certainty in the face of uncertain knowledge smart? |
The fruit of false certainty. One critical example of this, as we have said, is that most people don't succeed long-
Complexity's role. What is complex to understand and explain (as is attempted on this site) are the specific underlying reasons why or whether a so-
And that's another conflict here: dietary idealism would like to keep things simple, but if you also want bona fide evidence that is scientifically verifiable, you have to embrace scientific methods which involve detailed research. That's of course not so simple because such evidence has to be concerned with the actual biology, anthropology, evolution and genetics, and verifiable clinical results of things. None of which are or can be satisfied with being the kind of simple philosophies (simplistic or oversimplistic would be more accurate) that dietary
The real issue is this: How hard do we really want to look at things, and how much "truth" do we want to risk? Perhaps even to the point of realizing we have to live with some uncertainties as part and parcel of life? This implicit price in being free from oversimplistic dogmas that don't serve us well, however--
Uncertainty leaves you alert and primed for new vistas of discovery. Far from being a bane, it is the uncertainties in life that actually make it an interesting challenge, worthwhile, and even exciting. It's the very tentativeness of uncertainty that leaves you open, primed, and flexible, whereas being too certain dulls awareness and makes you closed and rigid. Uncertainty is a spice that makes you eager for new information that might even change the way you think, and can repeatedly open up new vistas of discovery for exploration. And that's what's exciting
Once you get a real taste of the process--
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