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3: What it is Like to be Reasonable

  • Page ID
    306929
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    We’ve discussed how inquiry draws us towards knowledge and understanding through sharing and critically reviewing the ideas and arguments that emerge from diverse perspectives, experiences, and ways of thinking. But this doesn’t happen automatically. Diverse perspectives and ways of thinking can also drive polarization, conflict and hostility. In this section we want to explore how diverse perspectives and ways of thinking can be harnessed to our mutual benefit rather than our mutual destruction. We’ve already alluded to a few of these conditions. Here I will list and characterize them more specifically. We’ll start with the personal traits of reasonable people. Then we’ll consider the social conditions to be found in communities populated by reasonable people.

    • 3.1: Personal Traits of Reasonable People
      This page highlights essential intellectual traits for effective inquiry: fallibilism, which recognizes human error; intellectual humility, fostering ego-free engagement; open-mindedness, focusing on evidence over beliefs; intellectual courage, embracing the possibility of being wrong; and perseverance, enduring confusion to deepen understanding.
    • 3.2: Reasonable Communities
      This page discusses the attributes of a reasonable community, emphasizing freedom from domination, tolerance, civility, and political engagement. It highlights critical thinking as essential for navigating differences constructively and warns against the limits of tolerance. The text suggests that political divisiveness arises from a lack of thoughtful engagement with diverse viewpoints.


    This page titled 3: What it is Like to be Reasonable is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Russ Payne via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.