Humans routinely believe wrong things, collectively, without it being a collective conspiracy to trick you.
The false dichotomy you present (“they’re right or they’re lying!”) isn’t reflected in the real world — and it’s worth knowing that you’re depending on trust in authorities rather than direct evidence.
> It is not irrational for someone to believe the Earth is round without being able to devise an experiment to prove it.
And I never said it was: just that it’s something you believe based on trust in authorities, not because you can (personally) justify the belief.
> These people are being logical in believing that, and walking around with your upturned nose telling them they're stupid because they can't "justify" their beliefs is not helping scientific literacy in the world.
Pretending that belief in authorities without being able to explain the proof is the same as scientific literacy is what’s actually harming scientific literacy — and it’s a confusion many people of average capability engage in.
The false dichotomy you present (“they’re right or they’re lying!”) isn’t reflected in the real world — and it’s worth knowing that you’re depending on trust in authorities rather than direct evidence.
> It is not irrational for someone to believe the Earth is round without being able to devise an experiment to prove it.
And I never said it was: just that it’s something you believe based on trust in authorities, not because you can (personally) justify the belief.
> These people are being logical in believing that, and walking around with your upturned nose telling them they're stupid because they can't "justify" their beliefs is not helping scientific literacy in the world.
Pretending that belief in authorities without being able to explain the proof is the same as scientific literacy is what’s actually harming scientific literacy — and it’s a confusion many people of average capability engage in.
Which was my original point.