The Philosophy Book

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146


DOUBT IS NOT A


PLEASANT CONDITION,


BUT CERTAINTY


IS ABSURD


VOLTAIRE (1694–1778)


IN CONTEXT


BRANCH
Epistemology

APPROACH
Scepticism

BEFORE
350 BCE Aristotle makes
the first reference to a child’s
mind as a “blank slate”,
which later became known
as a tabula rasa.

1690 S John Locke argues that
sense experience allows both
children and adults to acquire
reliable knowledge about the
external world.

AFTER
1859 John Stuart Mill argues
against assuming our own
infallibility in On Liberty.

1900 S Hans-Georg Gadamer
and the postmodernists apply
sceptical reasoning to all
forms of knowledge, even that
gained through empirical
(sense-based) information.

V


oltaire was a French
intellectual who lived in
the Age of Enlightenment.
This period was characterized by
an intense questioning of the world
and how people live in it. European
philosophers and writers turned
their attention to the acknowledged
authorities—such as the Church
and state—to question their validity
and their ideas, while also searching
for new perspectives. Until the 17th
century, Europeans had largely
accepted the Church’s explanations

of what, why, and how things
existed, but both scientists and
philosophers had begun to
demonstrate different approaches
to establishing the truth. In 1690
the philosopher John Locke had
argued that no ideas were innate
(known at birth), and that all ideas
arise from experience alone. His
argument was given further weight
by scientist Isaac Newton whose
experiments provided new ways of
discovering truths about the world.
It was against this background of

Every fact and theory
in history has been
revised at some point.

Every idea and theory
can be challenged.

We are not born with
ideas and concepts
already in our heads.

Doubt is not a
pleasant condition, but
certainty is absurd.
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