tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19305198.post12378083977686556..comments2024-03-27T03:19:11.216-04:00Comments on Assistant Village Idiot: Help RequestAssistant Village Idiothttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01978011985085795099noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19305198.post-387181782768547072014-12-30T02:16:39.191-05:002014-12-30T02:16:39.191-05:00I read the linked article but didn't find it p...I read the linked article but didn't find it particularly enlightening. The 'we are all confident idiots' title indicates that the issue is knowledge or information. Obviously nobody can know everything, and even people who are truly experts in some field don't have broad knowledge. I've seen this particularly with people who are technically trained, but also with people who have vague 'liberal arts' backgrounds. Few people are 'renaissance men' today, or widely knowledgeable. The idea that people are always mostly idiots is an exaggeration, though today people are 'victims' of a dumbed-down 'educational' system that is meant to indoctrinate and/ or misinform.<br /><br />But as to ''social conservatives'' being least susceptible to going along with trends and social fashion, such as endorsing gay marriage, this has nothing to do with being a 'confident idiot' because it concerns unchanging standards of right and wrong. There is no new information about homosexuality that should lead one to change one's moral beliefs on the subject. Many liberals cite the supposed 'discovery' of a ''gay gene'' but this is not factual, though they insist it is. It is the social liberals and relativists who are the 'confident idiots' there. Likewise with the belief in evolution, which is, contrary to popular opinion, not settled science, and not definitively proven. But they firmly insist it is -- mainly, IMO, because it is popular to believe in Darwin's conjecture (as I recently heard it called). But the very few of us who maintain skepticism on the evolution theory are considered backward for asking for proof. Likewise with AGW.<br /><br />Social conservatives, we dwindling few, won't change with the wind because on social issues, at least, we believe in unchanging standards as to what's true and moral. No 'situational ethics' or morality by fickle social consensus.Vanishing Americanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07723746944036650219noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19305198.post-51339224027777391482014-12-29T13:22:34.422-05:002014-12-29T13:22:34.422-05:00There doesn't seem to be a comment function in...There doesn't seem to be a comment function in the linked article. Interesting article, though.<br /><br />Three things caught my eye. One was the observation that people tend to have an "I'm OK" attitude and will resist any new information that contradicts that belief. I wonder if social conservatives might be a bit armed against this knee-jerk reaction by their belief in original sin. I'm probably more likely to resist a liberal's formulation of a duty I supposedly have than their assertion that I'm driven by motives such as selfishness or a desire to escape the consequences of my sins.<br /><br />Another was the prevalence of purpose-driven explanations, such as the idea that plants produce oxygen so we can breathe. The notions I associate with that approach are, among others, that employers hire people so they can have a comfortable wage, or that people earn income so that the government can tax it. Maybe a liberal would accuse a conservative of believing that people accept jobs so their bosses can turn a profit.<br /><br />The third was the author's excellent suggestion that we imagine we were going to turn out wrong about a major decision in the future, and then try to identify which assumptions today were most likely to have led us to the mistake.Texan99https://www.blogger.com/profile/10479561573903660086noreply@blogger.com