OK so that sounds quite a heavy title for a post but hopefully it won’t be as heavy as all that!
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The following is the text of an e-mail I have received in response to this blog post, Mike (the author) is a photographer who's blog I have been following with some interest over the past few months, He lives in the same area as me and I am hoping to get out with him so that he can teach me camera techniques and help me improve my photography skills. As he says, his response is too long a comment to have left directly on my blog so he chose to e-mail it to me, I am copying it into the end of the original post because it adds soem very thought provoking ideas to my original post, if you wish to find out more about Mike he can be found on his own website here.
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Hi David
Well, as you'll have now discovered, I've stumbled across your blog.
That's what you get for posting a link to it on Twitter! Heh heh.
Anyway, I wrote this *huge* comment to one of your posts only to find that blogspot wouldn't accept it cos it had "too many characters". A bit reluctant to then just consign it to the recycle bin, thought I'd email it to you. Do with it what you will.
Here 't is...
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Well, I've now returned the favour and bookmarked your blog ;)
Discovered through one of your tweets, and rather pleased about it I am too for this is a fascinating post. Most thought-provoking. And one with which I can only too easily identify. That's to say, the opening paragraphs.
I don't think I've ever phrased it to myself in quite such terms but for as long as I can remember I've always had an awareness that my perception of myself is very frequently at odds with the perception of me that others appear to hold. And generally the latter tends to be rather more positive than the former.
Which in effect, if I've understood you correctly, is pretty much the same as you're saying.
Perhaps I should qualify that for I'm not entirely happy with the terms "positive" and "negative", in the sense that "positive" could be taken to imply "good" or "nice" or whatever, and that's not quite what I meant.
More accurate perhaps would be to say that others' perceptions of my abilities and competencies frequently appear kindlier than my own.
What I'd not connected this disparity with however was the influence my early years viz parents etc may have had in the forming of my self-perception.
Its a fascinating and persuasive notion, and one to which I can see myself giving considerable thought.
But leaving that aside, you then go on to talk of people falling "into the trap of developing core beliefs then looking for evidence to support their belief rather than looking at all the evidence before forming a belief" and, as you rightly observe, in some circumstances it would be almost impossible to do otherwise.
This too set me to thinking. About the statement itself, and about the assumption implicit in the statement, which becomes much clearer with your closing remark. An assumption, moreover, that I suspect we all tend to make... that "evidence" is in some fashion more valid than "belief".
Particularly if we're equating validity with "closeness to the truth".
("Closeness to the facts"? Hmm. Even a statement as apparently simple as this raises profound questions.)
But I wonder if such an assumption is justified?
Here's a few random thoughts...
Can "evidence" be said to exist "in isolation" as it were? Or does it not, rather, derive its status from the interpretation we put upon it?
Even to the extent of deciding which factors are relevant and therefore constitute "evidence" and which factors should be discarded as irrelevant?
Is it not possible that the whole notion of "evidence" is little other than a product of our own perception of "reality"? And if so, would that not actually render it, paradoxically, a product of belief?
It seems to me that the attraction of restructuring (or attempting to
restructure) one's life upon "the evidence" in preference to core beliefs resides in the assumption that in some way "the evidence" is more accurate, more truthful, or more representative of "reality" (or however you wish to express it) than belief may be.
Yet, as you so rightly observe, "evidence sometimes changes over time".
Thus, how would we know, were we to structure our lives upon the evidence available today, that such evidence wouldn't change (or, more pertinently, even be proven wrong by the discovery of more complete evidence for example) tomorrow?
And if there is an "absolute reality" and the evidence available to us at any given time can only ever be reflective of our circumscribed knowledge and/or understanding of that absolute reality and therefore (and inevitably) incomplete, how wise can it be to structure our lives upon such an incomplete (and possibly completely mistaken) basis?
(Bringing this principle right back down to "our own doorstep", how can others' perceptions of us constitute any form of reliable evidence when their knowledge of us is far less complete than our own?)
Is it even possible to attempt such an undertaking? How would we know, for example, that we have all the available evidence at our disposal?
Could it not be that actions based on partial evidence may be more erroneous than actions based purely on belief?
And in fact would those actions themselves not be based upon belief...
the belief that we have all the available evidence at our disposal?
Dilemmas indeed!
I think the thing I find most worrying about this is the sense that an "evidence-based life" (for want of a better term) hints of a very mechanistic (one might almost say materialistic) approach, and seems to allow little room for "movements of the Spirit".
And that, so it seems to me, goes against the available evidence of what humans actually are, or how they live their lives in reality.
There's another paradox for you!
I doubt if any reasonable person would argue with the notion that certain things are susceptible of being decided upon the basis of the evidence. One example you've used is that of the harmful effects of smoking.
I can't imagine any reasonable person (even smokers) disputing that smoking can be (and generally is) seriously injurious of health. And such a conclusion is based purely upon the available evidence alone.
However, such examples don't (so it seems to me) necessarily or even logically lead to the inference that everything should be (or needs to
be) evidence-based.
Let's return to the matter of perceptions of self... one's own and those of others.
In my own particular case, were I to "buy into" the evidence offered by other peoples' perceptions of my abilities in certain areas then its distinctly conceivable that my efforts to improve in those areas would be significantly less than efforts based upon my own perception of such abilities.
In other words, its entirely conceivable that one's own lesser perceptions of oneself can be the motivation to strive to improve. And surely that is a good thing. Isn't it?
My own "spiritual path" (which, as you may have realised by now, goes by a somewhat different name to yours... though I tend not to place too much significance upon mere labels) demands of me a constant striving, which effort can only ever be based upon my own perception of myself and my shortcomings. Were I to allow it to be otherwise then its entirely conceivable that such striving wouldn't be anywhere near as rigorous.
Or so I believe ;)
And (returning to an earlier point) should validity even be equated to "closeness to the truth"? How can we ever know what such "truth" is (in any absolute sense) when it must forever be filtered through (or coloured by... whichever you prefer) our exclusively human perceptions? Would it not then make more sense to equate validity to relevancy?
And if relevancy be that which has the greatest potential for impacting our lives, or actually does impact and motivate us to the greater extent, then it seems to me that belief is far more valid than evidence.
Hmm. I've just re-read everything I've written and it strikes me as sounding somewhat challenging. Its not intended in that way. Its all just speculation reflective of my own virtually constant uncertainty about... oh... almost everything. Apart from my core beliefs of course
;)
fotdmike
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all the best
mike
Hi!
ReplyDeleteHeh heh, I've found you! But I'm really disappointed now as I penned what seemed to me a quite thoughtful comment for this post, only to discover that its not accepted because it has too many characters!
Oh pooh.
Reminds me of one of the reasons I prefer WordPress ;)
fotdmike