Epistemological Constraints are limits on what we can know, like when a blindfold stops you from seeing the whole picture.
Imagine you're trying to draw a picture of your favorite toy, but someone put a blindfold over your eyes. You can feel it, touch it, and maybe even guess its shape, but you can't see all of it at once. That's kind of like epistemological constraints, they're things that stop us from knowing everything about something, just like the blindfold stops you from seeing the whole toy.
Like a Puzzle with Missing Pieces
Think of knowledge as a puzzle. Each piece is a little bit of information. But sometimes, we’re given only some of the pieces, maybe we can’t see one side of the puzzle or we don’t have all the colors. That’s like having epistemological constraints, they’re the missing pieces that stop us from seeing the whole picture.
So, just like you might not know exactly what your toy looks like with a blindfold on, sometimes we don’t know everything about something because of limits in how we learn or see it.
Examples
- A child thinks the sun follows them around the world because they can't see the Earth's rotation.
- A person assumes all dogs are friendly because their dog is always nice.
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See also
- What are advanced implications?
- How can we fully understand 'The observer is the observed'? | J. Krishnamurti?
- What are ontological layers?
- What If Everyone Suddenly Stopped Believing in Reality?
- What If Everyone Stopped Believing in the Same Things?