ABSTRACT

This book defines the concept and practices of literacy through a discussion of knowledge, information media, culture, subjectivity, science, communication, and politics. Examining the ways in which the spread of literacy and education have caused culture wars in pluralist societies since the 16th century, the author reviews an interdisciplinary array of scholarly literature to contend that science, and more broadly evidence-based inductive arguments, offer the only reliable source information, and the only peaceful solution to cultural conflict in the 21st century. With a focus on the multifaceted practice of literacy-as-communication as embedded within larger social and political processes, this book offers a comprehensive study of literacy through five core topics: knowledge, psychology, culture, science, and arguing over truth in pluralist democracies. The central thesis of the book argues that we require a new literacy that incorporates reading and writing with advanced cognitive and epistemological skills. Today’s citizens need to be able to understand the basic cognitive and cultural processes through which knowledge is created, and they need to know how to evaluate knowledge, peacefully debate knowledge, and productively use knowledge, for both personal decisions and public policy. How Do You Know? The Epistemological Foundations of 21st Century Literacy is an interdisciplinary study that will appeal to scholars across the sciences and humanities, especially those concerned with pedagogy and the science of learning.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The knowledge gap

part I|42 pages

A history of education, democracy, and culture war

chapter 2|9 pages

The authority of tradition

Schooling, books, and the development of literacy

chapter 3|16 pages

Culture wars

Literacy, schooling, and the development of democracy

chapter 4|17 pages

Discontent with democracy

Pluralism and culture wars in the United States of America

part II|67 pages

Subjectivity, culture, and bounded rationality

chapter 6|9 pages

The concept of culture

chapter 7|14 pages

The subjective truth of fiction

chapter 8|12 pages

Bounded rationality

The problems of subjective knowledge

chapter 9|9 pages

Culture, common sense, and the news media

chapter 10|11 pages

Is this story true? Bias in the news media

part III|42 pages

Philosophy, science, and the development of objectivity

chapter 11|12 pages

Philosophy and the development of knowledge

chapter 12|10 pages

Science and the development of objectivity

chapter 13|11 pages

Provisional truth

The limitations of science

chapter 14|9 pages

Practical reasoning

Solving the problems of everyday life

part IV|38 pages

The limitations of argument

chapter 15|8 pages

Culture is a debate

chapter 16|8 pages

Understanding cultural values

chapter 17|10 pages

Open arguments and the warrant

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion

The virtues of toleration and democratic deliberation