philwelch
today at 5:10 PM
The honest usage of āit turns outā is usually to gloss over an unnecessarily tedious argument that the author doesnāt want to waste your time with. And I think this is a fair characterization of even the use that the author criticizes here:
> When I moved to New York, I was very excited at first. It's an exciting place. So it took me quite a while to realize I just wasn't like the people there. I kept searching for the Cambridge of New York. It turned out it was way, way uptown: an hour uptown by air.
In principle, itās entirely possible that pg kept a detailed diary of his attempt to find a community of intellectual peers in NY that compared to the one he found in Cambridge, and if you read the entire diary you would be satisfied that he carried out an exhaustive search. But even if that were the case (I wouldnāt expect it to be; who keeps detailed diaries documenting every opinion they ever form), that would dominate the length of an essay that was supposed to be about how cities work as focus hubs for specific types of ambition.
Thatās not to say pg canāt be wrong about this point; itās still a statement of opinion. What āit turns outā really signifies is that the author made a serious effort to investigate the question prior to forming the conclusion. They might be lying about that, but they can also lie about facts.
I guess I just consider it an insult to the readerās intelligence to say that āit turns outā is a particularly deceptive way to sneak in an unsubstantiated conclusion, because itās not very sneaky. If I said āit turns out the moon really is made of cheeseā, nobody would be fooled. If Buzz Aldrin said it, a few people might be fooled, but only because they already know heās actually been there.
On the other hand, we routinely accept āit turns outā reasoning all the time, in the sense that we generally trust other people to come to conclusions that we donāt feel the need to audit. If I get labs done at the doctorās office and it turns out I have high cholesterol, I donāt have a particular need to audit the labās methodology. You canāt rigorously audit all of the information in the world and if a writer you reasonably trust writes āit turns outā that X, you are reasonably justified in updating your certainty that X is true.