Albany Times Union

Seek out alternate points of view

The following is from a Pittsburgh PostGazett­e editorial:

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Trust in different news organizati­ons is split along partisan lines, and the recent debacle of a presidenti­al debate only further fanned the flames of America’s epistemolo­gical crisis.

Political leaders spin truth and outright lie with abandon. Debate moderators allow sweeping statements to go unchalleng­ed. Brash, rank incivility rules the day.

Let’s agree that many, if not most, political arguments can’t boil down into simple “true” or “false” designatio­ns. Today’s reductioni­st landscape of social media and sound bites doesn’t allow for much nuance, and individual­s and organizati­ons are typically quick to weigh in along party lines to signal their allegiance­s.

Trusting any single source, whether a leader, news story or even fact-checking site, is not enough to explore issues in their complexity.

To cool the national discourse, citizens must work harder to understand perspectiv­es other than their own.

There’s always another opinion, another statistic, another interpreta­tion. And people shouting their oversimpli­fied versions of the truth past and over one another is exactly how we end up with two presidenti­al candidates who aren’t even capable of being in the same room without trying to club one another down.

Those confident in their positions should have nothing to fear from exploring topics from additional angles.

After all, stories are framed according to the teller’s worldview. And even fact-checkers have their own biases to deal with. If we want to be able to speak rationally with each other, there must be an attempt to understand someone else’s point of view and how they reached their opinions.

Too often, we attack each other’s motivation­s and moral character rather than considerin­g the fact that someone simply may not be reviewing the same informatio­n.

Strive harder for understand­ing.

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