How do you know whom to trust? - Ram Neta

996,382 views ・ 2013-04-30

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Transcriber: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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Translator: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Daban Q. Jaff
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You believe that the Sun is much larger than the Earth,
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that the Earth is a roughly spherical planet
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that rotates on its axis every 24 hours
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and it revolves around the Sun once every 365 days.
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You believe that you were born on a particular date,
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that you were born to two human parents
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and that each of your human parents
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was born on an earlier date.
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You believe that other human beings
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have thoughts and feelings like you do
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and that you are not surrounded by humanoid robots.
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You believe all of these things and many more,
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not on the basis of direct observation,
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which can't, by itself, tell you very much
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about the relative size and motion
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of the Sun and the Earth,
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or about your own family history,
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or about what goes on in the minds of other humans.
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Instead, these beliefs are mostly based on
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what you've been told.
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Without spoken and written testimonies,
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human beings could not pass on knowledge
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from one person to another,
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let alone from one generation to another.
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We would know much, much less
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about the world around us.
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So learning about a topic
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by asking an expert on that topic,
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or appealing to authority,
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helps us gain knowledge,
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but, it doesn't always.
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Even the most highly respected authorities
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can turn out to be wrong.
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Occasionally this happens
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because a highly respected authority is dishonest
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and claims to know something
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that she or he really doesn't know.
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Sometimes it happens just because they make a mistake.
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They think they know when they don't know.
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For example, a number of respected economists
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did not expect the financial collapse of 2008.
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They turned out to be wrong.
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Maybe they were wrong
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because they were overlooking some important evidence.
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Maybe they were wrong because they were misinterpreting
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some of the evidence they had noticed.
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Or maybe they were wrong
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simply because they were reasoning carelessly
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from the total body of their evidence.
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But whatever the reason,
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they turned out to be wrong
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and many people who trusted their authority
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ended up losing lots of money,
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losing lots of other people's money,
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on account of that misplaced trust.
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So while appealing to authority
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can sometimes provide us with valuable knowledge,
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it also can sometimes be the cause
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of monumental errors.
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It's important to all of us to be able to distinguish
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those occasions on which we can safely and reasonably trust authority
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from those occasions on which we can't.
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But how do we do that?
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In order to do that,
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nothing is more useful than
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an authority's track record on a particular topic.
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If someone turns out to perform well
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in a given situation much of the time,
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then it's likely that he or she will continue
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to perform well in that same situation,
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at least in the near term.
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And this generalization holds true
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of the testimony of authorities as much as of anything else.
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If someone can consistently pick winners
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in both politics and baseball,
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then we should probably trust him or her
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to keep on picking winners in both politics or baseball,
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though maybe not in other things
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where his or her track record may be less stellar.
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If other forecasters have a poorer track record
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on those same two topics,
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then we shouldn't trust them as much.
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So whenever you're considering whether
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to trust the testimony of some authority,
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the first question to ask yourself is,
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"What's their track record on this topic?"
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And notice that you can apply
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the very same lesson to yourself.
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Your instincts tell you that you've just met Mr. Right,
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but what sort of track record do your instincts have
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on topics like this one?
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Have your instincts proven themselves
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to be worthy of your trust?
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Just as we judge other people's testimony
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by their track record,
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so, too, we can judge our own instincts
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by their track record.
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And this brings us one step closer
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to an objective view of ourselves
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and our relation to the world around us.
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