The Value of Doubt

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The government of the United States was developed under the idea that nobody knew how to make a government, or how to govern. The result is to invent a system to govern when you don’t know how. And the way to arrange it is to permit a system, like we have, wherein new ideas can be developed and tried out and thrown away. The writers of the Constitution knew the value of doubt … The fact that you are not sure means that it is possible that there is another way some day. That openness of possibility is an opportunity. Doubt and discussion are essential to progress.

Richard Feynman: The Uncertainty of Values

Feynman’s consistent humility with regards to what is knowable was in contrast to his gregarious and self-assured personality. This paragraph isn’t just noteworthy for what it says, but for also what it doesn’t say. It doesn’t argue that as individuals, we shouldn’t strongly hold convictions that we have carefully thought about and defend when necessary. It does say that as a society we should allow doubt and discussion.

2 responses to “The Value of Doubt”

  1. Those I Admire – Nehaveigur Avatar

    […] Richard Feynman, Shel Silverstein, Jim Harrison, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Venki Ramakrishnan, Jack London, Stewart Brand, Max Perutz, Benjamin Franklin, Rüdiger Nehberg, Sven Hedin, Werner Herzog, Lola Montez, Wolfgang Clemens, Heinrich Harrer. […]

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  2. Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography – Nehaveigur Avatar

    […] is full of insights about human nature. Of the many quotable passages, this one foreshadows what Richard Feynman wrote 200 years later about epistemic […]

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