TST Trainer

Takeaways

Topic:
Philosophy of Fiction
Timeless ideas at the intersections of science, philosophy, critical thinking, and history.
~ 5 minutes of takeaways.

Philosophy of Fiction.

10 random takeaways.

1.
Irrational ideas are not all the same. Some are disproven, avoid them. Others are speculative, meaning they may still turn out to be true. When you encounter speculation, decide your level of interest, but stay agnostic. Then decide between apathetic agnosticism and explorative agnosticism. Apathetic means you do not care to pursue it. Explorative means you do.
2.

Quote: 

From History:
Carr supports the heart of empirical narrative realism: evidence anchors history, but reason shapes the retelling. The facts keep the historian grounded in reality; the historian gives those facts sequence, context, and meaning. Always ask how much confidence each reconstruction deserves.
3.
From History:
New Look
After you categorize an idea as empirically true, rationally true, or currently false, you can then start to calibrate your belief in it. Even ideas in the irrational category may deserve some degree of belief, depending on the evidence, context, and the limits of what is currently known.
4.
Your imagination feels boundless because reality is rich, not because it is absent. Every myth, fantasy, and sci-fi universe you’ve explored was stitched from threads already present in the material world. Our creativity does not transcend reality. It reveals reality directly, indirectly, or through imaginary recombination.
5.

Article summary: 

Speculation exists even in science. What we observe are empirical ideas, and our good ideas about empirical things are rational ideas. Both are treated as true until disproven, but neither is the material world itself. Speculative ideas are either new or already disproven, and in a logical setting they remain irrational until evidence or sound reasoning moves them into a stronger category.
6.
Journalism is about public truth. Fiction is invented. But Philosophy of Fiction helps clarify the boundary between fact, imagination, myth, satire, propaganda, mistake, and lie. To understand truth, we must also understand non-truth. That makes Philosophy of Fiction a useful neighbor under Philosophy of Journalism.
The End. Refresh for another set.
TST Trainer
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Writing and coding by Michael Alan Prestwood.
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