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Doctrix Periwinkle's avatar

I love this. I’m reminded by this of Chesterton’s fence, the parable that that if you see a fence blocking a road, and you don’t know why it’s even there, you should hold off on tearing it down until you can figure out why it was placed there. Maybe those reasons no longer apply—in which case, demolish away—but if you literally cannot imagine a legit reason why the fence was constructed, you don’t know enough about the situation to act.

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Prudence Louise's avatar

That's a great test to apply to see if you understand opposing viewpoints. I've always thought of that as standing in their concept space, adopting their assumptions, and then judging its merits. So many people can't do that, drop their own assumptions when judging someone else's viewpoint.

If I can't see how their position makes sense or hangs together, I probably don't understand it. And if I don't understand opposing viewpoints, then my position isn't reasonable.

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