How could we test the inverse? How do we test if others believe in rare important truths? Because obviously if they are rare, then that implies that either we don’t share them, therefore do not believe they are truthful or important. ”Mel believes in the Law of Attraction, he believes it is very important even though it’s a load of hooey”
I suppose there are “Known-Unknowns” and things which we know are significant but kept secret (i.e. Google Pagerank Algorithm, in 2008 the ‘appetite’ for debt in European Bond Markets was a very important belief and those who believed the right level avoided disaster), we believe there is something to believe, but don’t know what the sin-qua-non belief is.
How could we test the inverse? How do we test if others believe in rare important truths? Because obviously if they are rare, then that implies that either we don’t share them, therefore do not believe they are truthful or important.
”Mel believes in the Law of Attraction, he believes it is very important even though it’s a load of hooey”
I suppose there are “Known-Unknowns” and things which we know are significant but kept secret (i.e. Google Pagerank Algorithm, in 2008 the ‘appetite’ for debt in European Bond Markets was a very important belief and those who believed the right level avoided disaster), we believe there is something to believe, but don’t know what the sin-qua-non belief is.