Someone clearly wasn't a STEM major. Most of those are naive logical positivists - which is why simple frameworks like libertarianism are common there. In the philosophy of science class I was taking as an elective when I was a physics major in undergrad, my mind was blown when it was pointed out that philosophers had actually found major problems with logical positivism and largely abandoned it in the 1930s. I then proceeded to learn practically nothing else and end up a libertarian myself for the next year and a half, under the influence of my "logical" physics/math major friends, before I actually realized there really were major problems with it. My humanities-majoring friends, whom I always had been closer to and never understood why, had to bring me up to speed in long phone calls after graduating.I know, buddy. You'd think anyone over the age of 15 would have long ago abandoned naive logical positivism but...
I will say I was much happier under the delusion that all problems could be solved by scientific reasoning and the free market. Realizing that the "free market" depends on state intervention to exist and has severe structural flaws, that the existence of problems like global warming and resource depletion were truly systemic in a way that could never be accounted for by privatization schemes and which impose significant constraints on laissez-faire capitalism, and that scientific reasoning rarely gives results that actually do much to solve human problems - that was my red pill moment. I have never been as happy since 2011 as I was before it, because philosophical problems really stick in me for whatever reason. To add insult to injury, a bunch of internet misogynists had to go and steal "red pill", robbing me of my favorite metaphor/cultural reference! FML.
edit: The Department of the Redundancy Department for Redundancy pointed out a redundant redundancy that was so obvious and noticeable that it was embarrassingly humiliating. I removed and deleted it.
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