
The Theory of Anything Episode 121: Beliefs
Nov 18, 2025
Delve into the tangled web of beliefs and their paradoxical nature. Bruce argues that while beliefs can motivate, they also come with dangers. Are we fooling ourselves by denying we have beliefs? Popper’s views on rationalism and how these relate to modern dilemmas—like AI doomerism—are examined. The discussion reveals how mythic belief systems can drive science and personal conviction, and why holding beliefs lightly might be the key. A provocative look at the balance between private motivations and public discourse.
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Beliefs Motivate But Mislead Easily
- Beliefs are both motivating and dangerous; acknowledging them lets you hold them looser.
- Denying beliefs creates hidden biases masquerading as careful rational analysis.
Admit Beliefs To Keep Them Flexible
- Admit you have beliefs so you can hold them loosely and remain open to criticism.
- Holding beliefs openly prevents mistaking biases for rigorous conclusions.
Private Motivations, Public Constraints
- Science has a public/private split: private motivations guide research while public outputs face objective checks.
- Michael Strevens highlights that public scientific claims must be framed for objective criticism to enable progress.










