Will Bouwman wrote: βWed Aug 30, 2023 8:29 am
Absolutely. The point of Socrates and the Oracle is that anyone who claims to know The Truth is almost certainly an idiot or a charlatan. That ethos is expressed by
'Nullius in verba' - 'Take nobody's word for it' the motto of the Royal Society and fundamental to the practise of science. If you claim to know better than that, then you are almost certainly an idiot or a charlatan.
I'm missing a lot of the context, so some of my response may seem off.
I don't think take nobody's word for it is the motto of the Royal Society. I can imagine that some members do this in relation to some you findings, claims, etc. But as a general heuristic I doubt it in the extreme. First, this would mean they would have to repeat all prior research in the areas and perhaps outside their areas. But, in fact they tend to presume that whatever authorities (journals, experts, other scientists, models, etc.) are probablyh correct or at least well justified. Some of this they may take as working hypotheses, but much of it they take as very likely to be true so they are not going to look into it, but rather they will use is as background, jumping off points, given, etc. Other people's word will affect what they decide to test and research and what they will be unlikely to research.
Someone might say 'this is not taking some particular person's word for it'. It is taking the words of a bunch of experts who have confirmed each other's work. But have they???? Well, yes, I generally trust them, depending on how much industry is paying for their research and what paradigmatic assumptions they are going on, etc. But, that's me taking other people's word for thing. I can't consider redoing doing all of civilization's knowledge, though I'm probably more skeptical of current accepted paradigms than most. And each of us is taking our own word that we have looked at, for example industry biases and their effects on research and paradigmatic biases and determined that this research we can assume is correct and further the implications or models built from it are correct and these others are more iffy. And the self-evaluation involved also.
Then there's claiming to know the Truth making on an idiot or charletan.
Right off one thing that irritates me about Socrates on this is how clear it is he thinks he knows all sorts of things. Not only conclusions, but also how one goes about finding knowledge. His process he thinks is a way to find the truth and/or eliminate falsehoods. He had ideas about Art, society, divine inspiration, ontology...he thought evil was the result of ignorace. He's not some Buddhist master who refuses to answer questions by specific content in sentences. The guy managed to arrive not only at mundane truths but also a lot of big ass Truths.
And implying that you know the truth and mocking and undermining other people and their truths is not somehow different from stating truths. He conveyed masses of truths and Truths.