The internet, social media, and media in general, are good at giving you memes and sound bites. No real knowledge, just information floating disconnected in your mind. And then more, and more, an information buffet. This is going to be one of the deepest posts I've written, important for developing a thoughtful Christianity.
First Principles
- The principle of existence—the first being that something exists and that something is real.
- The principle of causality—no thing cannot produce something.
- The principle of identity—something has attributes that make it identical to itself, a change would make it something else. It's one of the three laws of logic.
- The principle of the excluded middle—since something has to be one thing or another, then it can’t be something in the middle. This is the second law/principle of reality comes in.
Trying to mix something hits the third law of logic and another first principle.
- The principle of non-contradiction—it’s the fundamental law of reality that something cannot simultaneously be one thing, and another at the same time and in the same sense.
Confused? For example, I cannot be married to Casey, and a bachelor at the same time. A married bachelor is illogical. Before we were married I was a bachelor, now I’m married. It’s the either/or, and it’s an excellent tool to find if a claim is true or not. Just apply the claim to itself like above. Is this simultaneously true and not true at the same time?
Putting Information To The Test
- Does it exist?
- What is its definition, its identity?
- Does it contradict itself?
- Is it this, or not this? There cannot be a middle ground.
- Where did it come from?
- Is it similar to what caused it?
Types of Reasoning
- Make sure they were actually there and in a position to see anything.
- See if you can find some corroboration for the witness's claims so you can verify it.
- Examine the consistency and accuracy of the witnesses. If it’s changed over time then their testimony is in question. That’s why the evidential chain of custody is important to see who had it and when it changed.
- Check for bias on the part of witnesses. A key thing to remember is the difference between bias prior to the experience and conviction following the experience.
- Financial greed
- Sexual/relational lust
- Pursuit of power
- Inductive reasoning looks at a bunch of effects and conditions, then generalizes it, producing a theory or explanation that can be tested with deductive reasoning.
- Deductive reasoning takes the theory/statement, makes an observation, and predicts the conclusion. Used in a logical syllogism it's: major premise->observation or minor premise->does the conclusion naturally run to this result.
Software Glitches
- The Halo effect’s perception that pretty people are better. Simply be aware of your tendency to give deference to them.
- The availability heuristic, where we have just a small part of a sea of information. All that information, and you’ll see just a small part of it, and understand even less of it. The use of the First Principle questions is key here. So too are looking for patterns and underlying threads that will largely remain the same despite individuals’ perceptions. Then use reasoning.
- The anchoring bias, where you let the first piece of information influence you. Distill it to data, file it, and build a case like a detective without allowing confirmation bias (accepting information that only confirms your presuppositions) or information bias (to seek more information where it’s not reasonably needed) to influence.
- To make sure you’re not getting misinformation (the misinformation effect), remove adjectives and extreme verbs from a statement so it doesn’t trigger emotions as much, making for a more clinical read. Especially with the emotionally charged 24/7 news cycle.