Home Climate Matters Creating Change for Students, Teachers, and the Discipline

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  1. The authors write…

    ” People often believe that the sciences are more helpful than philosophy in addressing climate change, but we disagree.”

    I agree with your disagreement. Clearly the sciences are a necessary part of the solution, but that is more a case of addressing symptoms.

    The underlying fundamental cause of climate change, nuclear weapons, and other technology based threats like genetic engineering, AI etc, is our outdated relationship with knowledge.

    This is a VERY appropriate topic for philosophers to address. The fate of modern civilization depends on how well we manage our relationship with knowledge, and this seems to be too abstract a topic for most people to engage.

    Scientists are at a great disadvantage in addressing our relationship with knowledge, because developing knowledge is their passion, their business, and a fundamental principle of science culture. Scientists will have real difficulty being truly objective about our relationship with knowledge. Scientists are great at developing knowledge, but not at deciding what knowledge should be developed. To the scientist, all new knowledge is good, a 19th century philosophy.

    It’s entirely clear to me that focusing on our relationship with knowledge is a very important job for philosophers, and perhaps the most useful service they could provide to our culture.

    The degree to which philosophers are willing and able to take on this job is unknown to me. I’ve been repeatedly attempting to raise this subject both here on this blog and elsewhere for years now, and it’s very slow going.

    All of us should be activists for good causes we believe in. But if that is all we are to do we don’t really need philosophers. What we need philosophers for is a deep examination of the fundamental issue driving all these threats to our civilization, our outdated relationship with knowledge.

    Should a reader wish to see what I’ve written on this topic, click my name, and once on my site search for “knowledge”. This will bring you to an article entitled, you guessed it, “Our Relationship With Knowledge”. Apologies for the bother but this software will not allow me to post a link.

    There is so much to learn from such an investigation. As just one example, once we understand how simplistic, outdated and dangerous our “more is better” relationship with knowledge is, and how little this fundamental cause is addressed by the “experts”, our relationship with authority can also experience a revolutionary shift. I would particularly hope today’s young people would experience this shift, because without it, their future may very well be lost.

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