X. The Rhetorical Imperative
Truth is necessary but not sufficient. The tradition possessed truth and lost anyway. The Enlightenment possessed rhetoric and won for three centuries. Veriphysics must utilize both.
This is not a capitulation to sophistry. The Sophists taught persuasion divorced from truth; Veriphysics teaches truth deployed persuasively. The difference is fundamental. Sophistry manipulates; Veriphysics communicates. Sophistry aims at victory regardless of truth; Veriphysics aims at the victory of truth. The rhetoric serves the dialectic, not the reverse.
But rhetoric it must be. The tradition’s characteristic failure was assuming that good arguments would prevail because they were good—that truth, once articulated, would be recognized and accepted. This assumption was naive. Human beings are not purely rational; they are moved by passion, interest, habit, and social pressure. Arguments must be not only sound but audible—expressed in language that reaches the audience, framed in terms that resonate, presented with force that commands attention. The tradition spoke to specialists; Veriphysics must speak to the public.
This means clarity. The technical vocabulary of Scholasticism, however precise, is a barrier to those not trained in it. Veriphysics must translate without dumbing down. It must find language that is accessible without being imprecise, memorable without being glib, forceful without being manipulative. The Triveritas is itself an example: a sophisticated epistemological criterion expressed in a single word that anyone can remember and apply.
This means aggression. The tradition defended; Veriphysics attacks. Every Enlightenment claim that invokes reason, mathematics, or evidence must be challenged to produce the reasoning, the calculations, the evidence. The challenge must be pressed relentlessly, publicly, until the bankruptcy is exposed. The burden of proof must be shifted: those who claim the mantle of science must demonstrate that they practice science, not merely invoke its prestige. The tradition was too polite, too willing to grant good faith to opponents operating in bad faith. That politeness was a strategic error, and Veriphysics does not repeat it.
This means institution-building. Ideas require infrastructure. They require platforms for dissemination, credentials for legitimacy, networks for coordination, patronage for sustainability. The Enlightenment understood this; it captured and built institutions over generations, with patience and resources. Veriphysics must do the same. Alternative journals, alternative academies, alternative networks of scholars and students, alternative sources of funding—these must be created, sustained, and grown. The long game must be played. The tradition lost in part because it was outspent and out-organized; Veriphysics must remedy this deficit.
This means forming the next generation. The Enlightenment’s deepest victory was pedagogical: it captured the schools, shaped the curricula, formed minds before those minds could question what they were being taught. The graduates of Enlightenment institutions absorbed Enlightenment premises as default settings, rarely examined and almost never challenged. Veriphysics must compete on this terrain. It must produce materials suitable for education at all levels—accessible introductions for the young, rigorous treatments for the advanced, curricula that can be adopted by schools and colleges willing to teach something other than the regnant orthodoxy. The battle for the future is a battle for the young.
You can now buy the complete Veriphysics: The Treatise at Amazon in both Kindle and audiobook formats if you’d like to have it available as a reference.
Also, due to the high level of interest in Veriphysics and the amount of new material that others are already creating based upon its foundation, I have created a substack devoted specifically to Veriphysics, the Triveritas, and related discussions, papers, and applications. There are already two new posts there from a paper demonstrating philosophical confirmations of the legitimacy of the Triveritas from 17 different philosophical traditions.