Emily's Cat
Rarely prone to hissy-fits
I'm slightly ashamed to admit I got it straight away.
You are not alone
I'm slightly ashamed to admit I got it straight away.
Slow, you'll always be ahead of me. It's a good thing I have a cute behind.![]()
I can think of one or two Radio 4 comedy quiz shows. And, of course, politics.
Dave
What OntarioSquatch ignores is that a lack of expected evidence is evidence for a lack of the thing.
Patty should be part of a network of expected evidence. Sparse jots of data punctured by gaps is evidence of manipulation, or evidence that a new hypothesis is needed.
The longer the periods between jots, the more isolated the islands, the more they disconnect from the narrative. This isolation is more particular where other narratives have continued apace, in real-time, leaving dense and rich traces in the network. The strange peak of evidence that suddenly looms having no tie to the surrounding fabric is a red flag, at the very least.
Yes, I like the expected part in that. Absence of expected evidence is evidence that something's amiss.
ETA - What Dinwar said.
I'll go ahead and claim it. Bigfoot does not exist. My evidence is the complete lack of all expected physical evidence.
Hmm. I'd say that the list of fallacies, and the basic descriptions of them are correct... it's the application of them in this context that is false. The fallacies are real fallacies, but the veracity of the statement cannot be measured using that fallacy.
For example:
The maroon sections are correct. That is a true description of an appeal to ignorance.
The error is in the application. The OP is assuming that the lack-of-belief in the existence of bigfoot, in light of an astounding lack of evidence, is an appeal to ignorance. It's an incorrect application of the fallacy.
For it to be an appeal to ignorance, someone would have to be making the negative claim that bigfoot does not exist, and using as evidence in support of that claim the fact that no evidence exists.
...Years ago on this forum I predicted just such a reaction by saying the psychic proponent would object because the prediction in my counter example involved a different color shirt. He complained exactly in that fashion.
Anything I post will be argued against with more dishonest tactics and fallacies. That's how the discussion here works. For many here it's about staying in denial at all costs, not about getting to the truth. That's how it's always been over here, at least in the Bigfoot threads.
The example I posted is a negative claim that Bigfoot doesn't exist.
the example:
"After thousands of years of being on the continent, we would have had proof of Bigfoot by now if Bigfoot was real."
paraphrased:
"Bigfoot doesn't exist because we haven't found it"
The rest of the examples are correct as well, but for some reason people are misinterpreting it.
Both statement 1 and 2 imply that Bigfoot doesn't exist. Statement 1 may or may not be a response to a positive claim.
I still don't understand the vehemence with which people attack people who think there's a large, hairy beast on the loose. They're not selling sasquatch cure-all, or reading minds or casting spells, they're walking in the woods.
To me it makes sense. Here's examples of both positive and negative claims that are an appeal to ignorance
"There is no compelling evidence that UFOs are not visiting the Earth; therefore, UFOs exist."
"There is no compelling evidence that UFOs are visiting the Earth; therefore, UFOs don't exist."
Using Bigfoot
"There is no compelling evidence that Bigfoot doesn't exist; therefore, Bigfoot exists."
"There is no compelling evidence that Bigfoot exists; therefore, Bigfoot doesn't exist."
Did you read the post about the concept of the null hypothesis?
How does this translate to paleontology, where the fossil record is extremely disjointed, with massive gaps in time? I wouldn't think that sparse evidence is sufficient to assume manipulation.
In the case of bigfoot video, I would say that there are plenty of reasons to assume manipulation. The paucity of other evidence just isn't one of them.
They also promote all kinds of nonsense, claiming that Bigfoot have all kinds of magical abilities on top of being hyper smart.
And yes, Bigfoot proponents put people's lives and safety at risk while simultaneously milking them for their money. So it's hardly innocent fun escapism.
Anything I post will be argued against with more dishonest tactics and fallacies. That's how the discussion here works. For many here it's about staying in denial at all costs, not about getting to the truth. That's how it's always been over here, at least in the Bigfoot threads.
The example I posted is a negative claim that Bigfoot doesn't exist.
the example:
"After thousands of years of being on the continent, we would have had proof of Bigfoot by now if Bigfoot was real."
paraphrased:
"Bigfoot doesn't exist because we haven't found it"
The rest of the examples are correct as well, but for some reason people are misinterpreting it.