Jon the Geek
Thinker
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2005
- Messages
- 229
(I'm posting in good faith, assuming someone might be convinced of logical arguments, if not Ian)
While I don't agree with Ian's hypothesis, I think a lot of people are misunderstanding (or misrepresenting) what he is saying.
There are no fake fulgrams that I am aware of. If there were real fulgrams, and fulgrams could somehow make money off of people, the likelihood of fake fulgrams would increase.
However, as has been pointed out, all that has to exist is the idea that there could possibly be such a thing as a fulgram, and then people might pretend to be fulgrams in order to make money.
I'm willing to entertain the possibility that a world with real psychics will have more fake psychics than a world without real psychics. Having only one world in my dataset, and not a single verified psychic, I can't even begin to posit what the relationship might be, though. Likewise, I don't see how the reverse relationship is necessarilly true, especially with the counterexamples of superheroes and Santa Claus.
There are some ways to look into it, though. Do other things that we know to be real relate to the number of fakers of that type? For example, I have never heard of a single fake teacher, but there are clearly real teachers. There are a small number of fake police officers. Does this relate to the number of real police officers? Can we find data of known fakers, and find a correlation to statistics of the number of real people with that profession? If anyone is swayed by Ian's arguments, I recommend testing the idea out on some other professions.
While I don't agree with Ian's hypothesis, I think a lot of people are misunderstanding (or misrepresenting) what he is saying.
There are no fake fulgrams that I am aware of. If there were real fulgrams, and fulgrams could somehow make money off of people, the likelihood of fake fulgrams would increase.
However, as has been pointed out, all that has to exist is the idea that there could possibly be such a thing as a fulgram, and then people might pretend to be fulgrams in order to make money.
I'm willing to entertain the possibility that a world with real psychics will have more fake psychics than a world without real psychics. Having only one world in my dataset, and not a single verified psychic, I can't even begin to posit what the relationship might be, though. Likewise, I don't see how the reverse relationship is necessarilly true, especially with the counterexamples of superheroes and Santa Claus.
There are some ways to look into it, though. Do other things that we know to be real relate to the number of fakers of that type? For example, I have never heard of a single fake teacher, but there are clearly real teachers. There are a small number of fake police officers. Does this relate to the number of real police officers? Can we find data of known fakers, and find a correlation to statistics of the number of real people with that profession? If anyone is swayed by Ian's arguments, I recommend testing the idea out on some other professions.