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How should a normal person decide what's true?: The Story

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New to epistemology

Two mothers, one paper

In 2002, a midwife in Lancashire read Andrew Wakefield’s Lancet paper on MMR and autism. She had a master’s degree. She read the rebuttals. She read the financial disclosures when they surfaced. She vaccinated her children. Her neighbor — also degreed, in engineering — read the same paper, followed the same rebuttals, and did not vaccinate hers. Both were literate, motivated, terrified of getting it wrong. They arrived at opposite conclusions using what each described as careful research.

Describe doing your own research to a visiting anthropologist and it becomes alien epistemology — a phrase meaning the opposite of what it says. The supplicant retreats to a private screen, consults oracles whose incentives she has never examined, and arrives at a conviction she experiences as the product of reason. The process has no protocol, no replication step, no mechanism to distinguish the feeling of having learned something from confirming what she already believed. Seven billion people run on this epistemology. It kept the lab-leak hypothesis alive. It also concluded 5G towers cause cancer.

The old answer broke

The old answer was simple: trust the doctor, the newspaper, the government data. That answer worked when institutions maintained something resembling a track record and the public lacked tools to check. Both conditions collapsed. Institutions failed on Iraq WMDs, reversed on COVID masking, suppressed the lab-leak question, approved opioids that killed half a million people. The public acquired the entire scientific literature on a phone.

A librarian who watched do your own research become watch YouTube that confirms what you believe considers the curation infrastructure flawed but irreplaceable. That is institutional trust. A journalist burned by Iraq and Theranos trusts her own verification chain over any masthead. That is personal verification. A philosopher of science studying how knowledge propagates considers both trust experts and think for yourself cartoons of how real people reason. That is network epistemology. And a parent who has no time for epistemological frameworks but needs to make a decision by Tuesday about a medication — that is the pragmatic pluralist.

The nurse’s shift starts at six

The nurse in Ohio works twelve hours. Two hundred miles upstream, a chemical plant operates under a consent decree. The EPA data is public. The local paper closed in 2021. She could, in theory, read the FOIA documents. The question dissolves the moment you put an actual person inside it. True according to whom, verified by what process, delivered through infrastructure that may no longer exist? Her shift starts at six and her children drink the water.


Perspectives:
- Institutional trust
- Personal verification
- Network epistemology
- Pragmatic pluralists

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