Why are some beliefs so maddeningly resistant to evidence?

With Åsa Wikforss - Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at Stockholm University


Episode description:

You don’t have to go too deep on the topic of disinformation before you stumble into a question that philosophers have wrestled with for centuries: How do we know what we know? That’s when it’s good to have a philosopher in the room, and we are lucky today to welcome Åsa Wikforss, a professor of theoretical philosophy at Stockholm University and the leader of a multi-pronged international research effort called the Knowledge Resistance project. Åsa will be speaking in Washington from May 24th through to the 26th at a conference called Truth, Trust and Hope, put on by the Nobel Prize Summit series. It’ll be live-streamed, so check it out in the link below. 

In today’s conversation, Asa and I will explore why some people are more likely than others to resist available knowledge; we’ll cover the essential role of trust in how humans trade information; and we’ll discuss the difference between reality check dynamics and feedback loop dynamics as journalism models. 

Nobel Prize Summit 2023: Truth, Trust and Hope

Knowledge Resistance

 

Created & produced by Podcast Partners: www.podcastpartners.com


Created & produced by: Podcast Partners / Published: May 16 2023


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