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Rationally Speaking.
N. 31, December 2002
What do you
mean, rationally speaking?
From time to time I receive a letter in response
to this column that accuses me of being an intellectual
snob. Often the writer refers to the very title
of the column, rationally speaking.
The argument of my correspondents goes something
like this: (unstated premise) since rationality
equals truth, and (obvious statement of fact)
you call your columns rational, then
(first conclusion) you are so arrogant as to claim
that what you write must be the truth, and (second
conclusion) therefore imply that anybody who disagrees
with you is wrong.
Lets carefully analyze the unstated premise
and the two conclusions (no sense in denying the
fact that the column is, indeed, called rationally
speaking), because I think this will shed
some light on both my goals in writing these pieces
and, more importantly, on some common misconceptions
about rationality and truth. First off, the unstated
premise that rationality necessarily leads to
truth is clearly false, and acknowledged by philosophers
since the time of Plato. Dont get me wrong,
Plato did think that the best path to the truth
is indeed rational thought, but he also acknowledged
that one can arrive at the truth by other means
(e.g., by sheer luck, as in guessing). More importantly
for our discussion, Platos dialogues are
full of examples of people rationally arguing
different positions, of which at most one can
be correct!
Since there is no necessary equation between
rationality and truth, this takes care of the
second conclusion from the above piece of reasoning:
I cannot possibly be implying in my columns that
those who disagree with me must be wrong. At best,
these columns present an argument in favor of
a particular conclusion or position. Their value
is in laying down that argument as clearly as
the writer can manage, to then let the reader
decide how that argument measures up against others.
It is all part of the ongoing discourse among
human beings that is such a central part of any
desirable society.
As far as the first conclusion of the above reasoning
is concerned (I am arrogant enough to think that
I am right), surely that is a straw man. Anybody
defending a particular position, in writing or
in person, must be doing so because they think
they are right (okay, perhaps with the exception
of sophists and some lawyers and politicians).
It simply makes no sense to accuse somebody who
disagrees with you of being convinced of being
right. You are too, or you would not argue with
them! Of course, just because people are convinced
of being right, it doesnt follow that they
are. But that is precisely the value of continued
rational discourse: I present my best arguments,
you read them, think about them, come up with
your best counter-arguments, and so on.
Does this back and forth actually lead somewhere?
Do people ever change their mind? Of course they
do. Why, Ive changed my mind more than once
just this year! What may seem to make the enterprise
of rational dialogue a desperate one is that people
seldom acknowledge their change of mind. There
are good reasons for this, other than simple human
pride. To begin with, if you have thought hard
about something, and have formed an opinion over
years of reading and listening, you will not change
your position overnight, and you probably shouldnt.
Instantaneous conversions are the stuff of religious
experience, not of rational discourse. Second,
research on critical thinking and human cognition
has shown that the human brain is naturally resistant
to changing its patterns, and does so only after
repeated exposure to contrasting information (which
increases the so-called cognitive dissonance
between ones own beliefs and the reality
that one perceives). That is why one rarely wins
debates with other people, and yet debatesalong
with other forms of dialogueare useful because
they can stir people to reconsider some of their
conclusions.
So, rationally speaking does not (necessarily)
mean truthfully speaking, though of
course if I write something in good faith, I do
think that I am correct in what I am saying (and
so do you, whenever you write a letter to me arguing
against my writings). The rational way to attack
peoples arguments, therefore, is not simply
to accuse them of the arrogance of thinking they
are in the right, but in pointing out exactly
where we think they went wrong.
The irony is that rational discourse is so entrenched
in the human way of thinking that even people
who allegedly reject it as a way to the truth
do, in fact, use it. Not long ago a couple from
a county in rural Tennessee complained that they
did not want their child to be exposed to critical
thinking and argumentation in the public school
he was attending, because that was contrary to
their religious belief. Apparently oblivious to
the obvious contradiction, the parents hired a
lawyer to argue their case in court! We just cant
do without logic and rationality, even when we
consciously attempt to reject it.
I cant wait to read the arguments I will
get against the position defended in this column!
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