The way he used the term? Huh? "Conspiracy theory" is an accepted term that @Kai "the spy" used correctly, in accordance with its standard accepted usage.I don't care for the way you used the word "theory"
The way he used the term? Huh? "Conspiracy theory" is an accepted term that @Kai "the spy" used correctly, in accordance with its standard accepted usage.I don't care for the way you used the word "theory"
I don't care for the way you used the word "theory" as something that isn't yet a fact -- rather, a theory is something larger than a fact, a model that offers a possible explanation for a set of pre-established facts (e.g. the facts of how the planets move in space, or the facts surrounding an assassination) and makes predictions that can be tested against new facts. Aside from that, though, I agree with your overall premise, and I'm suggesting that the more formal idea of a theory is useful in discussing that premise, because a theory should be testable and should be amended or abandoned if the evidence doesn't fit it. Rational people who use that method can distinguish between real conspiracies and delusional fantasies. The problem is, the term "conspiracy theory" has unfortunately become associated primarily with the latter category, and with the paranoid, self-fulfilling beliefs of people who don't have a clue how theories are actually supposed to work. So it takes a concept that should be an antidote against that kind of thinking and uses it as a shorthand for that kind of thinking, and that's unfortunate.
So, semantics then. Okay, nice we cleared that up.
No, it's more than that. You're reacting to my first sentence and ignoring the larger point that it was just meant to set up. The semantic point is merely the springboard for what I'm actually talking about, which is a way of thinking about the question that basically agrees with and elaborates on what you were saying.
and the disagreement was one word which I didn't use in the scientific sense you prefer.
No, that's not the actual point, it's just the way I segued into my actual point. It's the beginning of the point I was making, not the end goal. It's not about anything as simplistically binary as "did/didn't prefer"; it would be a total waste of time even trying to have conversations if they were never about anything more complex than the flip of a coin. It's about suggesting that the real definition of theory offers a useful way of thinking about the question. "Theory" is not just a word, it's a tool. Language gives us ways of thinking about things and relating to them, and defining a question in the right terms is a valuable part of getting a handle on it.
Your point was about distinguishing between actual conspiracies and irrational beliefs in imaginary conspiracies. My point is that the mindset that comes with theoretical, scientific thinking is tailor-made for solving exactly that kind of problem, because the whole purpose of a theory is to create a conceptual framework whose validity can be tested against the evidence. What I'm saying is that it's the evidence that matters. The way to distinguish between the real conspiracies we have to worry about and the fringe theories of the delusional is by looking at the evidence (or lack thereof) rather than just the assertions. Society today is overly preoccupied with what people claim and what they believe, and what gets lost in the noise of claims and counterclaims is that it's actually possible to determine who's right by comparing the claims against the evidence. If we placed more value on evidence-based thinking and the process of testing ideas, then irrational, ideological, and counterfactual beliefs wouldn't be able to gain so much influence.
To a scientist, "theory" isn't just an arbitrary word, it's a whole worldview -- a way of codifying reality and solving problems, a powerful, fundamental tool for understanding the universe and sorting good ideas from bad. The layperson's definition of "theory" is just an ineffectual shrug -- "there's no way to know." That's backward, because the process of formulating a testable theory is how you find the answers. It's not merely an assertion of uncertainty, it's a mechanism for reducing that uncertainty. And that's what I'm talking about -- applying that whole way of thinking to the problem.
You're absolutely right. In the future, let's all refer to conspiracy hypotheses instead of conspiracy theories.
You're absolutely right. In the future, let's all refer to conspiracy hypotheses instead of conspiracy theories.
I'm disappointed that you're only interested in reducing this to simplistic, dismissive responses instead of trying to engage with the ideas I'm trying to contribute. My goal is to offer a useful way of addressing the problem you raised, a way of thinking that helps differentiate the real conspiracies we need to worry about from the nonsense. It's not about the words.
Seriously? That's what you're trying to "contribute?" Dude, I really hate to break it to you, but you are not the first person to think of this. Even @Kai "the spy"'s post, the one that you yourself were referring to, indicated that he was concerned with separating fact from fiction based on evidence.What I'm saying is that it's the evidence that matters. The way to distinguish between the real conspiracies we have to worry about and the fringe theories of the delusional is by looking at the evidence (or lack thereof) rather than just the assertions.
That depends: are you talking about Presley or Costello?So, was Elvis the first woman on the moon?
That depends: are you talking about Presley or Costello?
The thing that convinced me most solidly that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in assassinating President Kennedy was that at least three different investigations -- the Warren Commission, a CBS team led by Walter Cronkite, and an investigation by PBS's NOVA -- all independently came to that same conclusion.
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