Skepticism has a long
historical tradition dating back to ancient Greece , when Socrates observed:
“All I know is that I know nothing.” Modern skepticism however, is embodied in
the scientific method, which involves gathering data to formulate and test
naturalistic explanations for natural phenomena. The key to skepticism is to
continuously and vigorously apply the methods of science to navigate the
treacherous straits between “know nothing” skepticism and “anything goes”
credulity.
Scientific skepticism (also
spelled skepticism) is the practice of questioning whether claims are supported
by empirical research and have reproducibility, as part of a methodological
norm pursuing "the extension of certified knowledge". Scientific
skepticism is different from philosophical skepticism, which questions our
ability to claim any knowledge about the nature of the world and how we
perceive it. Scientific skepticism primarily uses deductive arguments to
evaluate claims which lack a suitable evidential basis. [1]
I thoroughly enjoyed, a long
video publication featured on the site, titled "Ancient Aliens
debunked", which in a straightforward fashion contradicts many of the
claims of the aliens-that-have-visited-earth-numerous-times advocates, on whose
views and proposed evidence a whole History Channel series was based upon. Links
for the video can be found here
and here.
Should you wish to explore
more on the matter of scepticism, I would suggest the Sceptic Magazine (UK ), or the FreeThinker (UK ). For a concise source for urban
legends, folklore, myths, rumors, and misinformation, try Snopes.com.
In general terms, as we are
increasingly hammered by views and revelations, of all different sorts, that
require our belief, time or money, we have to stand skeptical or critical to
say the least. So I urge you to think, question and inquire, before you
actually believe. Don't blindly believe, no matter how tired or desperate you
may feel.
Of course you cannot question
and inquire about everything. It is counter-productive and sure takes a lot of
time. For most of cases most scholars suggest using this thing called
"common sense". That, needless to say, implies that there is sense in
someone, before that sense being common, and actually put into use.
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