Posts

Showing posts with the label epistemology

How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong?

Image
How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong? Why “what if we’re wrong?” is a feature of thinking, not a bug Big-Picture Framing How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong? This question sits at the heart of epistemology—the study of how we know what we know—and it quietly shapes how we learn, lead, and make decisions. Instead of treating it as a purely abstract fear, you can use it as a practical lens: our beliefs are like maps, not the territory, and every map leaves things out. In this post, we’ll explore how knowledge can be wrong yet still useful, when it’s likely to be overturned, and how to live productively with uncertainty. Along the way, you’ll get a mental toolkit for questioning assumptions without falling into paralysis or cynicism. Why this question matters more than it seems On the surface,  “What if everything we know is wrong?”  sounds like late-night dorm room philosophy. But underneath, it’s a power question: It shapes ...