Porpoise of Life
Illuminator
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2014
- Messages
- 4,950
A very entertaining thread. And an excellent example of the Dunning-Kruger effect in action.
Edited by Agatha:Edited to remove moderated content
Of what scientific value are you to humans?
Loaded question.
And an excellent example of the Dunning-Kruger effect in action.
I see you're basically spamming the same material with the same posting style all over the 'net, with the same responses from readers.
Indeed, and definitely not worth staying up late again for. But yes, the argument does seem to fit a familiar pattern.
And normally we would be ill-advised to hold him accountable here for what he has said elsewhere. We debate here what he has said here, saith our moderators. But those foreign references elucidate part of the argument in that lately our self-proclaimed "god" of programming has tried -- as so many proponents do -- to gaslight his critics into believing that they're the ones who are out on the fringe. Arguments (paraphrased) such as, "What kind of brain would reject my obviously-cogent reasoning?" aim to undermine confidence among his critics by raising the possibility that their rebuttals are somehow biased or irrational.
When the data show a clear and consistent pattern of refutation elsewhere, among a variety of self-organized communities, that is congruent with what has happened here, we need not pay any further attention to the gaslighting. The references elsewhere act as a control.
I hesitated before posting it and did not reference specific details - this isn't my house - and I do intend to post within the MA.
It is an interesting thing and we've certainly seen it in the JFK assassination threads, where folks breeze on in, post their boilerplate argument in favor of their CT - which failed in other venues previously - and they seem genuinely surprised when the CT that failed elsewhere fails here, hence the meme I posted.
I just hope you guys go easy on the drinking game. This thread is a liver killer if I've ever seen one.
Indeed, and definitely not worth staying up late again for. But yes, the argument does seem to fit a familiar pattern.
And normally we would be ill-advised to hold him accountable here for what he has said elsewhere. We debate here what he has said here, saith our moderators. But those foreign references elucidate part of the argument in that lately our self-proclaimed "god" of programming has tried -- as so many proponents do -- to gaslight his critics into believing that they're the ones who are out on the fringe. Arguments (paraphrased) such as, "What kind of brain would reject my obviously-cogent reasoning?" aim to undermine confidence among his critics by raising the possibility that their rebuttals are somehow biased or irrational.
When the data show a clear and consistent pattern of refutation elsewhere, among a variety of self-organized communities, that is congruent with what has happened here, we need not pay any further attention to the gaslighting. The references elsewhere act as a control.
It's a simple yes or no question. Why are you unable to answer?
No, it isn't. The weighing of contradictory evidence doesn't fit into your simplistic notion of belief-vs-science.
Edited by Agatha:Edited to remove response to moderated content
No. Your examples fail to note that the initial beliefs were formed on the basis of evidence. The difference between your two hypothetical samples is not whether the beliefs were formed on the basis of evidence, but by what policy the beliefs were modified to accommodate new evidence. Judicious interpretation of contradictory data is part of scientific methodology. You've received no training in that methodology and you've had little if any opportunity to practice it. You are not an authority on scientific methodology.
This is a well plowed field. I've given you references to the two most cited works on the subject. You apparently don't care.
It's every bit of that, but the MA prevents me from describing what it's loaded with.
Don't you tire of being wrong?
Here is the remainder of the article:
The significant limitations of ordinary belief evaluation could also lead to the acceptance of unusual beliefs in the absence of pathology (Pechey and Halligan, 2011). The tendency to seek confirmatory evidence and be overly influenced by it, in particular, could lead to the acceptance or entertainment of unusual beliefs.
Edited by Agatha:Edited to remove picture for rule 6
FOOTNOTE:
O 'wise' one, what is it that the beings are confirming, if not belief? (Although the article had long specified belief)
Rather than ignore, I underlined the negative impact that belief designates with respect to science, as is evidenced by cognitive papers on belief..
Rather than ignore, I underlined the negative impact that belief designates with respect to science, as is evidenced by cognitive papers on belief..
As I mentioned prior, users via science aligned forums tend to promptly observe non-beliefism (especially its underlining of belief's neglectful science opposing nature) as valid.
(3) JayUtah: (Changes goal posts) "Scientists are also observed to ignore evidence, and its a critical problem in society."
Thusly, it is reasonable to ask: What type of brain rejects that belief, opposes science?
That some beings embrace scientific beliefs, does not suddenly remove the fact that belief does not predominantly occur on evidence,
...as reflected in neuroscience research shown, and common dictionary definitions.
The sequence, whether received or not, is empirically observed.
FOOTNOTE:
While some users reject facts, others from elsewhere, including ScienceForums, had promptly come to observe belief's science opposing nature as valid.