Difference between revisions of "Perception-based thinking"
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[[Perception-based thinking]] is the belief that how people ''perceive'' reality is more important than ''reality itself'', or even ''is'' reality. | [[Perception-based thinking]] is the belief that how people ''perceive'' reality is more important than ''reality itself'', or even ''is'' reality. | ||
==Nugget== | ==Nugget== | ||
− | The reality behind this apparently absurd, ''[[issuepedia:Nineteen Eighty-Four|1984]]''-ish statement seems to be that vast power lies in the ability to affect what people think reality is, and that this is more important than the ability to effect changes in the real world (since | + | The reality behind this apparently absurd, ''[[issuepedia:Nineteen Eighty-Four|1984]]''-ish statement seems to be that vast power lies in the ability to affect what people think reality is, and that this is more important than the ability to effect changes in the real world (since [[control of knowledge is control of action]] – and you can therefore get them to do ''for you'' whatever you want). |
==Problem== | ==Problem== | ||
As a philosophy of governance, however, it runs into the problem that objective reality will proceed regardless of what the public ''believes'' it will do. If a policy reliably leads to poverty and economic instability, for example, it will do so regardless of whether the public can be led to ''perceive'' that everything is okay. | As a philosophy of governance, however, it runs into the problem that objective reality will proceed regardless of what the public ''believes'' it will do. If a policy reliably leads to poverty and economic instability, for example, it will do so regardless of whether the public can be led to ''perceive'' that everything is okay. | ||
+ | ==Links== | ||
+ | ===Reference=== | ||
+ | * {{issuepedia}}: more technical explanation |
Latest revision as of 19:32, 27 January 2015
Perception-based thinking is the belief that how people perceive reality is more important than reality itself, or even is reality.
Nugget
The reality behind this apparently absurd, 1984-ish statement seems to be that vast power lies in the ability to affect what people think reality is, and that this is more important than the ability to effect changes in the real world (since control of knowledge is control of action – and you can therefore get them to do for you whatever you want).
Problem
As a philosophy of governance, however, it runs into the problem that objective reality will proceed regardless of what the public believes it will do. If a policy reliably leads to poverty and economic instability, for example, it will do so regardless of whether the public can be led to perceive that everything is okay.
Links
Reference
- Issuepedia: more technical explanation