Lee McIntyre is a Research Fellow at the Center for Philosophy and History of Science at Boston University. He is the author of Dark Ages- The Case for a Science of Human Behavior and Post-Truth, both published by the MIT Press.
My book of the week is Post-Truth by Lee McIntyre. This is a
slender volume from MIT's Essential Knowledge Series that looks at
one of the most disturbing trends of our time: the increasing
dismissal of science, evidence, facts, and truth itself. The author
gives us an intelligent account of why it's happened and a
compelling reminder that we should all fight back against this
dangerous nihilistic idea.—Fareed Zakaria, CNN
This is a gem of a short treatise. Lee McIntyre's Post-Truth is a
perfect counter to a problem that has erupted in our national
consciousness—alternative facts. McIntyre's enumerated suggestions
on how we must all be our own fact checkers in this post-truth age
should be taped to the computer keyboard of every journalist,
politician, and reader in America, before the next
election.—Michael Shermer, Skeptic Magazine
McIntyre's book is perhaps the most thoughtful of the post-truth
set....[He] argues persuasively that our methods of ascertaining
truth—not just the facts themselves—are under attack, and that this
assault is especially dangerous.—Carlos Lozada, Washington Post
What I like about this book, which is more of a philosophical tour,
is that the author isn't just concerned about the fate of
particular facts or truths, but he thinks what is really under
assault here is the very method by which we ascertain truth or get
to truth, in particular, science.—Carlos Lozada, PBS NewsHour
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