Basically: How does one pursue the truth when direct engagement with evidence is infeasible?
I came to this question while discussing GMO labeling. In this case I am obviously not in a position to experiment for myself, but furthermore: I do not have the time to build up the bank of background understanding to engage vigorously with the study results themselves. I can look at them with a decent secondary education's understanding of experimental method, genetics, and biology, but that is the extent of it.
In this situation I usually find myself reduced to weighing the proclamations of authorities:
- I review aggregations of authority from one side and then the other--because finding a truly unbiased source for contentious issues is always a challenge, and usually says more about the biases of whoever is anointing the source "unbiased."
- Once I have reviewed the authorities, I do at least some due diligence on each authority so that I can modulate my confidence if a particular authority is often considered partisan on an issue. This too can present a bias spiral checking for bias in the source pillorying the authority as partisan ad infinitum.
- Once I have some known degree of confidence in the authorities of both sides, I can form some level of confidence in a statement like: "I am ~x% confident that the scientific consensus is on Y's side" or "I am ~Z% confident that there is not scientific consensus on Y"
That is meaningless unless
I'm pretty sure plenty of people care whether the produce is picked by illegal immigrants, at least to the extent that if they're told, it would influence their decision. I'm also pretty sure people would care if the company owner is gay, or has had an abortion, or any of a number of politically charged things that we don't demand should go on labels.
There's a difference between not working for reasons that affect the point and not working for reasons that don't. The example is of a politically charged trait. If one politically charged trait isn't workable, pretend I instead mentioned another that is.
If you don't think abortion is a good example, change it to "has been disclosed as a campaign donor to a politician of party X" or "has refused to take an IQ test/has tested at an IQ of ___" or whatever politically charged example you think is valid.