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by TimTheTinker
2459 days ago
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Because it constitutes belief and/or knowledge. Because it is true, or someone believes it to be so. Because it carries explanatory power - something we all strongly desire. You might call those reasons “purposes” - if so, I don’t disagree. But the truth or falsehood of an idea transcends any “purpose” someone may have for speaking it. This is the academic posture: to dispassionately evaluate truth claims without fearing the speaker. |
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That doesn't stop us from acknowledging the fact that ideas and worldviews have strong ties and are intermingled enough that they almost always warrant an underlying motivation whether that be a noble search for truth or a way of digging further into denial.