Chapter 449 Ah...
Rebirth of the Nameless Immortal God
âAh, Iâm sorry.â Jason scratched the back of his head. He couldnât believe he had just tried to help such a legend find the right classroom.
âDonât worry about it.â Dyon smiled. âI appreciate the help.â
Jason awkwardly made his way back to his seat as Dyon turned his back to the classroom. He took a look at the podium but shook his head, instead eyeing a foldable white table. With a single leap, Dyon say cross legged on it, looking out into the classroom to find gazes filled with fire.
Clara suddenly raised her hand. Penelope looked over in shock. Clara never did anything like this, there had even been times where movie stars and peak level athletes with hundreds of millions of followers visited the white house and she never batted an eye. Why would she being so active with Dyon?
Seeing the hand, Dyon smiled. But, when he noticed who it was, his lip twitched. âI guess I didnât escape that easilyâ¦ân/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âClara. How are you?â
Penelope gave her friend another weird look. She knew Dyon personally? Enough for him to remember her name? What was going on?.
âShe is the presidentâs daughter, I guessâ¦â
Clara however, maintained her normal cold gaze. âSince you need a lecture topic, I thought Iâd give you one.â
It didnât escape Dyon that Clara had ignored his question. But, he could only chuckle bitterly at that. âWhat did you have in mind?â
âA topic in philosophy.â Clara replied quickly, her emotions never wavering. âHow do we know when we know something?â
Dyonâs eyes flashed, but he kept his thoughts inside, instead turning his gaze to the rest of the class. âSkepticism. Foundationalism. Infallibilism. Justified True Belief. Internalism. Externalism.
É´[0)á´ á´Ê âThe theory of knowledge has touched everything from the philosophy that accepts we know next to nothing to the philosophy of trusting your senses to present things as they are.
âIn the end, we ironically know quite little about what it takes to know something. Even the most intuitive philosophies have been falsified. For example, the idea that we have knowledge when something is justified first, then proved true and then finally believed, was widely accepted previously. But, even that has been proved to be on shaky footing.â
Clara raised her hand, waiting for Dyon to nod toward her to speak again. âHow has JTB been falsified?â
Dyon smiled. âSay you have two people. Person A and Person B. Both are in line for a promotion to a job. Just before the announcement, Person A takes Person B to lunch where Person B sees that Person A leaves the affair with ten cents left in his pocket. Person B then later find out that heâs lost the promotion race. So, Person B then asserts that the newly promoted official had ten cents in his pocket just after leaving their lunch.
âHowever, what Person B then finds out is that he was wrong. The promotion was, in fact, for him. But, when he looks in his pocket, he realizes that he too has ten cents in his pocket.
âTechnically he was justified because he saw Person A with ten cents and thought Person A got the promotion. His belief was also true, because even though the promotion wasnât for Person A, the person who did get it also had ten cents in their pocket.
âBy this logic. You can see that the JTB was followed perfect, but itâs still not real knowledge. If anything, it was a lucky coincidence.â
The students nodded in acknowledgement. Justified True Belief seemed like a foolproof method. And yet, here was a clear example where it wasnât the case.
Clara raised her hand again. âThen what about our morals? How do we know theyâre right if we canât even decide on how to tell what is factual and what isnât?â
âMorals are something that are often dictated by how weâre raised and the society we were brought up in. Everything from our religion to how we consume entertainment is likely decided very early on. Itâs only in recent times that morals have begun to be forged by popular opinion and thatâs because of the advent of things like social media and technology.â
Clara gave up on raising her hand and simply spoke out directly.
âSo. If I went to a completely different world, are you saying its likely my morals would be effected by their culture? Or are you saying that what Iâm susceptible to accepting was decided from a very early age?â
âWell. The latter is likely on a gradient. If you were engrained with something from youth, it would likely take you a much longer time to change that portion of you. Maybe you have an example? Iâm open to a class discussion.â
âSure.â Claraâs cold eyes flashed. âLetâs talk about polygamy.â
Dyonâs breath got caught in his throat, causing him to cough violently.
âSure,â Dyon coughed again, âwhat about it?â
âI was just curious. If you were raised in a society where monogamy was the norm and you left to a place where polygamy was accepted, how long would it take you to flip? Two years? One year? Less than that?â
The class began to feel some tension in the air. They didnât know what was going on or why their normally cold and quiet class beauty was pressing this discussion so hard, but no one could get a word in. Even Dyon was struggling to, let alone Penelope or the rest.
âExtenuating circumstances?â Dyon wasnât even lecturing anymore. It was almost like he was caught red handed and had to explain himself. The class never thought theyâd see this side of their living legend, but here it was in front of them.
âDo tell. Iâm also interested in how gender differences might be incorporated here. When it comes to polygamy, how likely is a male to switch his morals versus a female?â
âUh â â Dyon cleared his throat.
âAlso. When said person goes off to a new world with a completely new set of morals, do they forget about their world? How much of their old selves do they erase? Do they forget their past relationships? Do they forget the ties they used to have? Or did they purge all of that before they left so that they could change their moral code as much as they wanted when they left?â
Clara stood, her cold eyes flashing as she placed her laptop into her bag and walked down the lecture hall steps.
âJust thought Iâd help with the lecture topic. Iâm not feeling well, I hope youâll excuse me.â
âAh â â Dyonâs voice seemed caught in his throat as Clara walked out, leaving the light click of the lecture hall door as the only noise in the space.