How do you know whom to trust Ram Neta

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

You believe that the Sun is much larger than the Earth,

that the Earth is a roughly spherical planet

that rotates on its axis every 24 hours

and it revolves around the Sun once every 365 days.

You believe that you were born on a particular date,

that you were born to two human parents

and that each of your human parents

was born on an earlier date.

You believe that other human beings

have thoughts and feelings like you do

and that you are not surrounded by humanoid robots.

You believe all of these things and many more,

not on the basis of direct observation,

which can’t, by itself, tell you very much

about the relative size and motion

of the Sun and the Earth,

or about your own family history,

or about what goes on in the minds of other humans.

Instead, these beliefs are mostly based on

what you’ve been told.

Without spoken and written testimonies,

human beings could not pass on knowledge

from one person to another,

let alone from one generation to another.

We would know much, much less

about the world around us.

So learning about a topic

by asking an expert on that topic,

or appealing to authority,

helps us gain knowledge,

but, it doesn’t always.

Even the most highly respected authorities

can turn out to be wrong.

Occasionally this happens

because a highly respected authority is dishonest

and claims to know something

that she or he really doesn’t know.

Sometimes it happens just because they make a mistake.

They think they know when they don’t know.

For example, a number of respected economists

did not expect the financial collapse of 2008.

They turned out to be wrong.

Maybe they were wrong

because they were overlooking some important evidence.

Maybe they were wrong because they were misinterpreting

some of the evidence they had noticed.

Or maybe they were wrong

simply because they were reasoning carelessly

from the total body of their evidence.

But whatever the reason,

they turned out to be wrong

and many people who trusted their authority

ended up losing lots of money,

losing lots of other people’s money,

on account of that misplaced trust.

So while appealing to authority

can sometimes provide us with valuable knowledge,

it also can sometimes be the cause

of monumental errors.

It’s important to all of us to be able to distinguish

those occasions on which we can safely and reasonably trust authority

from those occasions on which we can’t.

But how do we do that?

In order to do that,

nothing is more useful than

an authority’s track record on a particular topic.

If someone turns out to perform well

in a given situation much of the time,

then it’s likely that he or she will continue

to perform well in that same situation,

at least in the near term.

And this generalization holds true

of the testimony of authorities as much as of anything else.

If someone can consistently pick winners

in both politics and baseball,

then we should probably trust him or her

to keep on picking winners in both politics or baseball,

though maybe not in other things

where his or her track record may be less stellar.

If other forecasters have a poorer track record

on those same two topics,

then we shouldn’t trust them as much.

So whenever you’re considering whether

to trust the testimony of some authority,

the first question to ask yourself is,

“What’s their track record on this topic?”

And notice that you can apply

the very same lesson to yourself.

Your instincts tell you that you’ve just met Mr. Right,

but what sort of track record do your instincts have

on topics like this one?

Have your instincts proven themselves

to be worthy of your trust?

Just as we judge other people’s testimony

by their track record,

so, too, we can judge our own instincts

by their track record.

And this brings us one step closer

to an objective view of ourselves

and our relation to the world around us.