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Term Audio

A TST specific term.

Empiricist.

The Empiricist is an OVM viewpoint of evidence-calibrated inquiry.

The Empiricist is one of the three OVM viewpoints. It is not a whole-person label or a worldview. It is a viewpoint tool used to understand how a claim looks when confidence is calibrated to support.

The Empiricist viewpoint asks: What is the claim? What supports it? What kind of idea is it? Is it empirical, rational, speculative, personal, symbolic, or disproven? How strong is the evidence? What do good authorities say? What would change my mind?

This viewpoint does not demand perfect certainty before every belief. Everyday life requires provisional trust. The Empiricist can accept reasonable things as true enough for now, especially when they are supported by public knowledge, good authorities, repeated testing, and reality’s pushback. Germs cause disease. Evolution happened. Smoking raises cancer risk. These are not guesses. They are well-supported public truths.

But the Empiricist also remains open to revision. Confidence rises and falls with the quality of support. If the evidence weakens, confidence weakens. If the evidence strengthens, confidence strengthens. The Empiricist does not cling to a claim merely because it feels good, belongs to the tribe, or once seemed reasonable.

In OVM, the Empiricist is the calibrated viewpoint. It is not the middle because it splits the difference between belief and doubt. It is the middle because it tries to avoid both dogmatic belief and chronic rejection. Its discipline is proportional confidence.

The End.

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