Saturday, August 23, 2008

Trying to understand the world

As I did in my previous post, I'm commenting on something which I read in When Children Don't Learn: Understanding the Biology and Psychology of Learning Disabilities, but which is peripheral to the main idea of the book. When McGuinness introduces the major theories about learning disabilities, she writes, "All theories are only approximations to the truth. The truth is always elusive and changeable, but some theories are more true than others" (p. 34).

I think this is an important point which is often overlooked. I think that reality is so vast and infinite that we can't expect to explain it all. I think sometimes people who know a lot about something fall into to the trap of thinking they know everything. I think it is easy to think that the corner of the world that we can see is all there is, to think that when we know everything about our corner, then we know everything. I think the brightest people are those who have a large enough view to be able to glimpse some of the vastness, and who therefore know that they don't know everything.

However, the impossibility of explaining everything does not mean that we should stop trying. The last part of the quote from McGuinness is, "some theories are more true than others." The more we pursue understanding through scientific inquiry, the closer we can get to understanding reality.