-
So imagine that you had
your smartphone minituarized
-
and hooked up directly to your brain.
-
If you had this sort of brain chip,
-
you'd be able to upload and download
to the Internet at the speed of thought.
-
Accessing social media or Wikipedia
would be a lot like --
-
well, from the inside at least --
-
like consulting your own memory.
-
It would be as easy
and as intimate as thinking.
-
But would it make it easier
for you to know what's true?
-
Just because a way
of accessing information is faster
-
doesn't mean it's
more reliable of course,
-
and it doesn't mean that we would all
interpret it the same way.
-
It doesn't mean that you would be
any better at evaluating it,
-
in fact you might even we worse
-
because, you know, more data,
less time for evaluation.
-
Something like this is already
happening to us right now.
-
We already carry a world of information
around in our pockets,
-
but it seems as if the more information
that we share and access online,
-
the more difficult it can be
-
for us to tell the difference between
what's real and what's fake.
-
It's as if we know more
but understand less.
-
Now, it's a feature of modern life,
-
I suppose,
-
that large swaths of the public
live in isolated information bubbles.
-
We're polarized not just over values
but over the facts,
-
and one reason for that
-
is that the data analytics
that drive the Internet
-
get us not just more information
but more of the information that we want.
-
Our online life is personalized;
-
everything from the ads we read
-
to the news that comes down
our Facebook feed
-
is tailored to satisfy our preferences.
-
And so while we get more information,
-
a lot of that information ends up
reflecting ourselves
-
as much as it does reality.
-
It ends up,
-
I suppose,
-
inflating our bubbles
rather than bursting them.
-
And so maybe it's no surprise
-
that we're in a situation --
-
a paradoxical situation of thinking
that we know so much more
-
and yet not agreeing
on what it is we know.
-
So how are we going to solve
this problem of knowledge polarization?
-
One obvious tactic is to try
to fix our technology --
-
to redesign our digital platform
-
so as to make them less
susceptible to polarization.
-
And I'm happy to report that many
smart people at Google and Facebook
-
are working on just that.
-
These projects are vital.
-
I think that fixing technology
is obviously really important,
-
but I don't think
that technology alone --
-
fixing it is going to solve the problem
of knowledge polarization.
-
I don't think that because I don't think,
-
at the end of the day,
-
it is a technological problem.
-
I think it's a human problem,
-
having to do with how we think
a what we value.
-
In order to solve it,
-
I think we're going to need help.
-
We're going to need help from psychology
and political science,
-
but we're also going to need help,
I think, from philosophy.
-
Because to solve the problem
of knowledge polarization,
-
we're going to need to reconnect
-
with one fundamental,
philosophical idea ...
-
that we live in a common reality.
-
The idea of a common reality is like,
-
I suppose,
-
a lot of philosophical concepts:
-
easy to state,
-
but mysteriously difficult
to put into practice.
-
To really accept it,
-
I think we need to do three things,
-
each of which is a challenge right now.
-
First, we need to believe in truth.
-
You might have noticed
-
that our culture is having
something of a troubled relationship
-
with that concept right now.
-
It seems as if we disagree so much that,
-
as one political commentator
put it not long ago,
-
it's as if there are no facts anymore.
-
But that thought is actually an expression
-
of a sort of seductive line
of argument that's in the air.
-
It goes like this:
-
we just can't step outside of our
own perspectives,
-
we can't step outside of our biases.
-
Every time we try,
-
we just get more information
from our perpesctive.
-
So, this line of thought goes,
-
we might as well admit
that objective truth is an illusion,
-
or it doesn't matter,
-
because either we'll never know what it is
-
or it doesn't exist in the first place.
-
That's not a new philosophical thought --
-
skepticism about truth.
-
During the end of the last century,
-
as some of you know,
-
it was very popular in certain
academic circles.
-
But it really goes back all the way
to the Greek philosopher Protagoras,
-
if not farther back.
-
Protagoras said that objective
truth was an illusion
-
because "man is the measure
of all things."
-
Man is the measure of all things.
-
That can seem like a bracing bit
of real politic to people,
-
or liberating because it allows each of us
to discover or make our own truth.
-
But actually,
-
I think it's a bit of self-serving
rationalization disguised as philosophy.
-
It confuses the difficulty of being
certain with the impossibility of truth.
-
Look,
-
of course it's difficult
to be certain about anything;
-
we might all be living in "The Matrix,"
-
you might have a brain chip in your head
feeding you all the wrong information.
-
But in practice, we do agree
on all sorts of facts.
-
We agree that bullets can kill people.
-
We agree that you can't flap
your arms and fly.
-
We agree --
-
or we should --
-
that there is an external reality,
-
and ignoring it can get you hurt.
-
Nonetheless, skepticism
about truth can be tempting
-
because it allows us to rationalize
away our own biases.
-
When we do that,
-
we're sort of like the guy in the movie
who knew he was living in "The Matrix,"
-
but decided he liked it there anyway.
-
After all, getting what you
want feels good.
-
Being right all the time feels good.
-
So often it's easier for us
-
to wrap ourselves in our
cozy information bubbles,
-
live in bad faith,
-
and take those bubbles
as the measure of reality.
-
An example I think of how
this bad faith gets into our action
-
is our reaction to the
phenomenon of fake news.
-
The fake news that spread on the Internet
-
during the American
presidential election of 2016
-
was designed to feed into our biases,
-
designed to inflate our bubbles.
-
But what was really striking about it
-
was not just that it
fooled so many people.
-
What was really striking to me
about fake news,
-
the phenomenon,
-
is how quickly it itself became
the subject of knowledge polarization.
-
So much so that the very term --
-
the very term, "fake news,"
-
now just means "news story I don't like."
-
That's an example of the bad faith
towards the truth that I'm talking about.
-
But the really, I think, dangerous thing
-
about skepticism with regard to truth
-
is that it leads to despotism.
-
"Man is the measure of all things"
-
inevitably becomes "the man
is the measure of all things."
-
Just as "every man for himself"
-
always seems to turn out to be
"only the strong survive."
-
At the end of Orwell's "1984,"
-
the thought policeman O'Brien
is torturing the protagonist,
-
Winston Smith,
-
into believing two plus two equals five.
-
What O'Brien says is the point
-
is that he wants to convince Smith
that whatever the party says is the truth,
-
and the truth is whatever the party says.
-
And what O'Brien knows is that
once this thought is accepted,
-
critical descent is impossible.
-
You can't speak truth to power
-
if the power speaks truth by definition.
-
OK, so I said that in order to accept
that we really live in a common reality
-
we have to do three things.
-
The first thing is to believe in truth.
-
The second thing can be summed up
-
by the Latin phrase that Kant took
as the motto for the enlightenment.
-
Sapere aude,
-
or "dare to know,"
-
or as Kant [...] it,
-
"Dare to know for yourself."
-
I think in the early days of the Internet,
-
a lot of us thought
-
that information technology
was always going to make it easier
-
for us to know for ourselves,
-
and of course in many ways, it has.
-
But as the Internet has become
more and more a part of our lives,
-
our reliance on it,
-
our use of it has become
often more passive.
-
Much of what we know today
we Google-know.
-
We download prepackaged sets of facts
-
and sort of shuffle them along
the assembly line of social media.
-
Google-knowing is useful
-
precisely because it involves
a sort of intellectual outsourcing.
-
We offload our effort onto a network
of others and algorithms.
-
And that allows us of course
to not clutter our minds
-
with all sorts of facts.
-
We can just download them
when we need them,
-
and that's awesome.
-
But there's a difference between
downloading a set of facts
-
and really understanding how
or why those facts are as they are.
-
Understanding why
a particular disease spreads,
-
or how a mathematical proof works,
-
or why your friend is depressed
-
involves more than just downloading.
-
It's going to require,
-
most likely,
-
doing some work for yourself.
-
Having a little creative insight.
-
Using your imagination,
-
getting out into the field,
-
doing the experiment,
-
working through the proof,
-
talking to someone.
-
I'm not saying of course that we
should stop Google-knowing.
-
I'm just saying we shouldn't
overvalue it either.
-
We need to find ways of encouraging
forms of knowing that are more active
-
and don't always involve passing off
our effort into our bubble.
-
Because the thing about Google-knowing
-
is that too often it ends up
being bubble-knowing.
-
And bubble-knowing means
always being right.
-
But daring to know,
-
daring to understand,
-
means risking the possibility
that you could be wrong.
-
It means risking the possibility
-
that what you want and what's true
are different things.
-
Which brings me to the third thing
that I think we need to do
-
if we want to accept that we live
in a common reality.
-
That third thing is
have a little humility.
-
By humility here, I mean
epistemic humility,
-
which means, in a sense,
-
knowing that you don't know it all.
-
But it also means something
more than that.
-
It means seeing your worldview
as open to improvement
-
by the evidence and experience of others.
-
Seeing your worldview
as open to improvement
-
by the evidence and experience of others.
-
That's more than just being
open to change.
-
It's more than just being open
to self-improvement.
-
It means seeing your knowledge
as capable of enhancing
-
or being enriched by
what others contribute.
-
That's part of what is involved
-
in recognizing that there's
a common reality
-
that you too are responsible [for.]
-
I don't think it's much of a stretch
-
to say that our society is not
particularly great
-
at enhancing or encouraging
that sort of humility.
-
That's partly because,
-
well, we tend to confuse
arrogance and confidence.
-
And it's partly because,
-
well, you know, arrogance is just easier.
-
It's just easier to think
of yourself as knowing it all.
-
It's just easier to think of yourself
as having it all figured out.
-
But that's another example
-
of the bad faith towards the truth
that I've been talking about.
-
So the concept of a common reality,
-
like a lot of philosophical concepts,
-
can seem so obvious
-
that we can look right past it
-
and forget why it's important.
-
Democracies can't function
if their citizens don't strive,
-
at least some of the time,
-
to inhabit a common space.
-
A space where they can pass
ideas back and forth when --
-
and especially when --
-
they disagree.
-
But you can't strive to inhabit that space
-
if you don't already accept
that you live in the same reality.
-
To accept that we've
got to believe in truth,
-
we've got to encourage
more active ways of knowing.
-
And we've got to have the humility
-
to realize that we're not
the measure of all things.
-
We may yet one day realize the vision
-
of having the Internet in our brains,
-
but if we want that to be liberating
and not terrifying,
-
if we want it to expand our understanding
-
and not just our passive knowing,
-
we need to remember
that our perspectives,
-
as wondrous, as beautiful as they are,
-
are just that --
-
perspectives on one reality.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)