What happens when we understand something?
We are talking about the “Aha!” moments in our lives.
Otherwise also known as “seeing the light”, “Dah”, “smelling the coffee”, “I
get it!”, “I get it, now!”, “of course!”, you get the idea. The problem is what
makes us understand something when moments before we didn’t. And it’s not
necessarily a matter of knowing something more before we get to understand
something, although sometimes it might be the case.
We can also describe understanding as rearranging what we
already know in such a way or in such a perspective that from a state of
puzzlement we morph into a state of understanding. We are all familiar with
these mental states of affairs in our life starting from our infancy. It is a
pity that we were subjected to complex situations in our childhood when we were
the least equipped with our knowledge of things. Yet, we are supposed to
understand the complexities of life such as money, reproduction, nourishment
and so on. What we know, for example, at this young age about money is that its
causal effect is something that makes us happy. And even then being happy is
not a sufficient condition to understand something.
What does it mean to say we understand something? The Aha!
moment must surely generate a rush of some “feel good” chemicals in our brain
that affirms our newly acquired epistemic state of affairs. Indeed this is how
we motivate young children at school or at home by praising them for getting
things right or doing what we ask them. And does understanding equal to
learning something?
Another question is: does understanding create a feel good
event in us thus leading us to
believe that something is good or the truth? I suggest the questions maybe relevant because
we have a bias to associate what we think we understand to what we know and
thus turning our understanding into something good.
Our understanding does not confer truth on the thing that we
understand. Understanding something is a mental event and a subjective one at
that. How and why we understand something depends on our subjective epistemic
state of mind. In many cases we might even have a conflict of epistemic states:
we might be in a situation when we know the facts and the public pronouncement
of such facts, but we fail to understand how the facts can lead to the accepted
“conclusion”.
Maybe this is one of the most common concerns we have about
understanding certain events in life. We know the facts but the conclusion does
not seem to be right; we feel as if we have some innate formal logic algorithm
telling us that we should not believe the conclusion, especially the public domain
conclusion. Of course, some people can happily live in a state of bliss without
engaging this formal logic algorithm.
For example, we just don’t believe how our team could lose
against an inferior team in the semifinal; it just does not make sense. Until,
that is we discover months or years later that some Asian syndicate bribed one
of our player to lose the match. In the real world, this problem is of mega
proportions.
9/11 is another case in point. At face value, plus the
official story, we believe that a massive tall steel building can swallow an aircraft
that is made of delicate metals. And the result is that both the aircraft and
the building are pulverised into dust. As a dormant plane spotter I’ve never
heard of a plane being pulverised into dust after a crash; there are always
bits and pieces lying about. And I’ve been on a military plane that crashed and
later used by firelighters with real fire to train upon. These things only
happen in cartoons and comics. This is not a matter of scepticism but rather a
matter of unable to understand how the facts can lead to pulverised steel and concrete.
The first time this happened was when the atomic bombs were dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
And of course, Brexit, does not make sense until one knows
the real factors behind this abuse of democracy: tax havens and the desire to
turn the UK into a tax haven explains the mad rush to leave the EU by the
present UK Government. It also happens that this year is the year when the EU anti-tax
evasion regulations have to be applied. See for example: UK tax reform must be
condition of EU post-Brexit trade accord, say MEPs https://www.theparliamentmagazine.eu/articles/news/uk-tax-reform-must-be-condition-eu-post-brexit-trade-accord-say-meps
.
In a way, not understanding something is not necessarily a
weakness in us especially when we already know enough about the subject: it is not always our fault and in any case give the other person the opportunity to be wrong. Sure,
someone who never saw a crashed and burnt aircraft and never saw the relevant
cartoons would be justified in believing the official narrative. But not
everyone is in this state of epistemic bliss which is why many professional
experts have been investigating the events of the 9/11 to discover what really
happened.
In effect understanding is not something we do but something
that happens in us, a kind of epistemic transformation as mentioned above. But
the transformation might happen because we possess the true knowledge in the
context of what we understand. But we can understand by suppressing our beliefs
or maybe even knowledge so that we can conform to the crowd.
Sometimes maybe we do not really understand something but
claim to understand by simply agreeing with the consensus. This is precisely
the situation Thomas Kuhn was describing in his book The Structure of
Scientific Revolutions. Basically, and this is my paraphrasing of the idea,
when our facts do not fit reality anymore we do not change our mind and accept
the error but rather we change the paradigm. We accept the new facts and move
on from there with the new paradigm. This takes time and in the context of
human interaction might cause serious effects on people in the meantime.
There are also two types of understanding: we “understand
what” and we “understand how-to”. For example, we understand the workings of
gravity, the what, and from this we move on to understand how to send rockets
into space (how-to). So if our understanding of something is correct, (or
represents reality, or p explains q*) then we can move from knowing-what to
knowing how-to and we succeed in our endeavour. One implication of us
understanding something is that we can successfully apply what we understand in
real life and maybe even do things on automatic. For example, this month when I
tried to renew my travel ticket the machine did not offer me the usual options
to renew. It transpired that for some reason (unknown to everyone) the system
decided that I am a pensioner and should thus use a different card.
The other aspect of understanding something is that we subject
our epistemic state of mind to the possibility of falsifiability, in other
words something that is subject to testability. Whatever we understand we do so
independent of reality, hence the necessary condition that if what we
understand is knowledge that knowledge has to stand the test of time. Does this
mean that we might be wrong? In effect anything we call knowledge is always
subject to testability. Indeed this is the scientific and philosophical methods
at arriving to knowledge. Anything else is just dogma and, hence, there is
nothing to understand with dogma.
Best Lawrence
* the
following article is an excellent in depth and pure philosophical expose of
understanding in philosophy: Understanding in Epistemology by Emma C. Gordon - https://www.iep.utm.edu/understa/
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6-10-2019 minor typos corrected
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