This thesis is comprised of five discrete but related chapters in applied, social, and political epistemology. Specifically, most of the thesis is centred around fighting falsity; that is, for example, what should you do when one someone asserts something wrong, outlandish, or flat-out dangerous to you or those around you? What is the best course of action if you come across such a claim on the internet? What sort of claims even are wrong, outlandish, or flat-out dangerous? I open with a discuss…
Read moreThis thesis is comprised of five discrete but related chapters in applied, social, and political epistemology. Specifically, most of the thesis is centred around fighting falsity; that is, for example, what should you do when one someone asserts something wrong, outlandish, or flat-out dangerous to you or those around you? What is the best course of action if you come across such a claim on the internet? What sort of claims even are wrong, outlandish, or flat-out dangerous? I open with a discussion of bullshit and identify a new phenomenon I call “hedged bullshitting” which I argue is a superlative form of deception we ought to be concerned about. I turn in chapter two to a discussion of what makes for an epistemically good objection (and forbearance from objecting), employing the influential performance-normative framework from virtue epistemology to answer this. I then call for caution in chapter three; objecting can and will go wrong, especially when it comes to certain controversial false assertions, thus we ought to not be so laissez-faire when it comes to engaging with interlocutors. In light of this call for reticence, I explore a different method of fighting falsity in chapter four: censorship and no-platforming. While potentially effective strategies, I argue they make for hiltless swords—they cannot be safely used. In the final chapter, I offer a broad critique of the philosophy of conspiracy theories, rejecting almost every widely held assumption in the literature. I offer my own, more satisfactory definition of conspiracy theories that I argue will best advance the literature.