Clostridium botulinum (credit: Wikimedia Commons)
Another
more general example of the dangers posed by an inaccurate picture of reality
can be seen in the common activity of home canning. I may think I know all
about bacteria and how to can foods at home in sealer jars. If I’ve looked through
microscopes, I may be confident my picture of the microscopic level of reality
is a true one. But if my knowledge of home canning covers only common bacteria,
my knowledge may prove to be a dangerous thing. The usual boiling-water bath
for foods canned in jars does kill most bacteria, but for a few microbes,
boiling is not enough. Botulism is nothing to be played around with. Botulinum
bacteria can be boiled to death, but their deadly toxins can survive boiling.
My partial and inadequate set of beliefs about home canning might get me
killed.
Or
consider a few even more basic examples. Even my senses sometimes are not to be
trusted. I may believe that light always travels in straight lines. I may see,
half immersed in a stream, a stick that looks bent at the water line, so I
believe it to be bent. But when I pull it out, I find that it is straight. If I
am a caveman trying to spear fish in a stream, blind adherence to my ideas
about light will cause me to starve. I will overshoot the fish every time,
while the girl on the other shore, a better learner, cooks her catch.
I
can immerse one hand in the snow and keep the other on a hand warmer in my coat
pocket. If I then go into a cabin to wash my hands in tepid water, I find that
one hand senses the water is cold, the other, that it is warm. Can I not trust
my own senses?
When
we seek to find some things in our experience that we can believe in
absolutely, we are stopped by questions like “What do I really know?” and “How
can I be sure of the things that I think I know?” and “Can I even be certain of
what I see, hear, and touch?” We
are deeply aware that we need a reliable core around which we can build the
rest of our belief system or we may, sometime down the road, suddenly find that
a whole set of ideas, and the ways of living the system implies, are dangerous
illusions.
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