Truth, Under Constraint How Conviction Outruns Its Own Evidence The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated. For those drawn to the tension between certainty and doubt, the fragility of shared reality, and the discipline of thinking under constraint. #Epistemology #PhilosophyOfMind #ThomasKuhn #KarlPopper #MichelFoucault #CognitiveBias What if certainty is not something we arrive at, but something we begin with? In this episode, we explore how conviction forms before reflection, how it stabilises the world just enough for us to act, and how it quietly shapes what we take to be real. Through the lens of epistemology, we trace a difficult proposition: that truth is not abandoned under uncertainty, but constrained by the very processes that make understanding possible. Drawing on thinkers such as Thomas Kuhn, Karl Popper, and Michel Foucault, alongside insights from cognitive bias research, we examine how knowledge is formed within paradigms, reinforced through institutions, and filtered through the limits of perception. What emerges is not a rejection of truth, but a more demanding relationship to it. We follow the arc of belief as it forms, stabilises, and resists revision. We ask what happens when interpretation becomes identity, when shared reality fragments, and when even openness risks hardening into its own kind of certainty. The challenge is not to abandon conviction, but to hold it in a way that remains answerable to what might unsettle it. Reflections This episode traces how certainty forms, how it hardens, and why its failure is often invisible from within. Here are some reflections that surfaced along the way: What feels obvious is rarely examined, and what is rarely examined is rarely questioned. Certainty does not end thinking. It makes thinking possible. Interpretation does not just reveal the world. It organises it. We do not always encounter our errors as errors. Beliefs harden not through decision, but through reinforcement. Shared reality is necessary, but never neutral. Openness is not the absence of conviction, but exposure to its limits. The difficulty is not being wrong, but recognising when correction is required. Truth is not something we possess. It is something we remain answerable to. Why Listen? Explore how epistemology shapes our understanding of truth and certainty Learn why cognitive bias makes error difficult to detect from within Listen On: YouTube Spotify Apple Podcasts Support This Work If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so here: Buy Me a Coffee Further Reading Kuhn, Thomas. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962. Popper, Karl. The Logic of Scientific Discovery. London: Routledge, 1959. Foucault, Michel. The Order of Things. New York: Pantheon, 1970. Kahneman, Daniel. Thinking, Fast and Slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011. Further Reading Relevance Thomas Kuhn: Shows how paradigms shape what can be seen, known, and questioned. Karl Popper: Argues that knowledge advances through falsifiability, not certainty. Michel Foucault: Reveals how power and discourse shape what is accepted as truth. Daniel Kahneman: Demonstrates how cognitive processes produce systematic errors in judgement. What we call truth must remain exposed to what could unmake it. #Philosophy #Epistemology #Truth #Certainty #CognitiveBias #PhilosophyOfMind #CriticalThinking #Knowledge #Reality #Thinking #TheDeeperThinkingPodc
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