New Philosopher

Believing is seeing

In The Gutenberg Galaxy, a revisionist tour de force that gave us the axiom “the medium is the message”, Marshall McLuhan argued that moveable type was the prime culprit in shaping a culture enslaved by the tyranny of the visual. Marks on the printed page possessed a visual logic, he explained, in being not just indelible, but replicable, legible, homogeneous. Rising above the contingencies and subjectivities associated with perspective, that is, point of view, they insist that ocular information is paramount, or that seeing is believing.

It’s a powerful argument. And it appears, at first blush, to apply equally to the development of scientific knowledge, which, simply put, tests its claims to veracity against the inarguable evidence

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Philosopher

New Philosopher2 min read
FORTUNES WON & LOST
In 2005, this British couple won a $2.76 million lottery jackpot, after which they did what many lottery winners do: they bought a Porsche and went on luxury holidays. Five years later, their underinsured house caught on fire, and media reports sugge
New Philosopher1 min read
The Waste Land
What is that sound high in the airMurmur of maternal lamentationWho are those hooded hordes swarmingOver endless plains, stumbling in cracked earthRinged by the flat horizon onlyWhat is the city over the mountainsCracks and reforms and bursts in the
New Philosopher2 min read
What Makes One Wealthy?
From the late 1940s onwards, the tool most used to measure national wealth has been Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the brainchild of Belarus-born Simon Kuznets. GDP adds up how much we spend on items like cars and couches, and then adds on top how muc

Related Books & Audiobooks