the world does appear to be flat, so I think it is incumbent on others to prove decisively that it isn’t.
I haven’t yet tracked down a good quote on this type of “asymmetric intellectual warfare”, where one advances some outlandish claim that lays waste to large portions of a consistent belief network, and then insists it’s the victim’s obligation to repair the damage. I’m pretty sure the idea has been around for a while, perhaps not in terms of that military metaphor. Is that topic covered somewhere in the Sequences?
It’s not presented in terms of information warfare, and it doesn’t explicitly cover “insist[ing] it’s the victim’s obligation to repair the damage”, but the original article on Dark Side Epistemology (now known as “anti-epistemology”, I hear) sounds similar to what you’re getting at. Specifically, the point that to deny one scientific fact, you need to deny a massive network of principles and implications, to the point that your entire epistemology ends up either contradictory or useless.
I haven’t yet tracked down a good quote on this type of “asymmetric intellectual warfare”, where one advances some outlandish claim that lays waste to large portions of a consistent belief network, and then insists it’s the victim’s obligation to repair the damage. I’m pretty sure the idea has been around for a while, perhaps not in terms of that military metaphor. Is that topic covered somewhere in the Sequences?
It’s not presented in terms of information warfare, and it doesn’t explicitly cover “insist[ing] it’s the victim’s obligation to repair the damage”, but the original article on Dark Side Epistemology (now known as “anti-epistemology”, I hear) sounds similar to what you’re getting at. Specifically, the point that to deny one scientific fact, you need to deny a massive network of principles and implications, to the point that your entire epistemology ends up either contradictory or useless.
It’s clearly an abuse of the concept of the Burden of Proof. Along with some motivated skepticism.