From a previous discussion it seems to be that the only relevant evidence has to be a scientific study (peer reviewed?) (that study doesn't even need to be replicated or involve many participants — Andrew4Handel
Anecdotes are not generalisable but can be qualitatively powerful. Trends on Reddit, Facebook, Twitter etc are a source of data most people can access. — Andrew4Handel
. For a study to be scientific, it would need to follow accepted scientific methodology which would include peer review and duplication — Hanover
Isolated anecdotes are distinguished from trends in that the latter are associated with higher frequency of occurrence and predictability. . A study of trends is scientific if it follows established statistical methodology. — Hanover
The study cited in the aforementioned thread had not been replicated but was published academically . I also mentioned the replication crisis in science in that thread. — Andrew4Handel
am just attacking the notion that only science is a reliable source of evidence or that evidence has to be couched in scientific jargon citing p-values etc. — Andrew4Handel
It's a reliable strategy. It cuts down on people having their humors adjusted by leeches.I am just attacking the notion that only science is a reliable source of evidence or that evidence has to be couched in scientific jargon citing p-values etc. — Andrew4Handel
From a previous discussion it seems to be that the only relevant evidence has to be a scientific study (peer reviewed?) (that study doesn't even need to be replicated or involve many participants).
This appears to me to be a patently false assertion not backed up by logic either.
Especially in the era of the internet where most internet users have access to an enormous pile of data. For example as in a my previous thread when I cited Reddit.
I think scientists and social scientists et al could benefit from going on major platforms like these to see what is happening in the real world outside of ideology and academic cloisters.
Anecdotes are not generalisable but can be qualitatively powerful. Trends on Reddit, Facebook, Twitter etc are a source of data most people can access. — Andrew4Handel
It's a reliable strategy. It cuts down on people having their humors adjusted by leeches. — Cheshire
Nevertheless, the internet is a goldmine of information but the catch/drawback is extremely low signal-to-noise ratio i.e. getting one's hands on a valuable piece of data would be like looking for a needle in a haystack. — TheMadFool
porn — Andrew4Handel
Let's begin small and a few billion years ago, shall we? In the primordial oceans when life first took hold on earth, the flagellum corkscrews its way through the water, taking this single motile bacterium to places so to speak. Why? I bet only so that it can get to fresh sources of food and away from dangers. Then it feeds, hopefully in peace. It feeds, feeds, and feeds. Why? So that it becomes "mature" enough to divide/multiply (I can never seem to tell the difference). — TheMadFool
Another important thing which I have probably mentioned elsewhere in the past is that you cannot always prove personal experience this is endemic in sexual assault/consent cases. It is considered that most sexual assaults do not lead to criminal convictions because it is one persons word against another. — Andrew4Handel
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