The goal of complete knowledge (Berry)

September 5th, 2007  |  Published in Philosophy, Quotes, Science, Truth  |  1 Comment

The modern scientific enterprise apparently is directed toward the goal of complete knowledge. But if you had complete knowledge, if you knew everything, could you then act? Could you apply what you knew, or would you be paralyzed by a surplus of considerations? If you were to map within a circle all possible relationships among all the points along its circumference, you would end up with a black circle—an engorgement of “information” that would not be knowledge, but rather the practical equivalent of the blank circle you began with.

Thus the proposition that it would be good to know everything is probably false. The real question that is always to be addressed is the one that arises from our state of ignorance: How does one act well—sensitively, compassionately, without irreparable damage—on the basis of partial knowledge?

–Wendell Berry, Life is a Miracle: An Essay Against Modern Superstition (2000), p. 149

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Responses

  1. Jeremy says:

    September 5th, 2007 at 10:10 am (#)

    Ahh, sanity.

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