These so-called critical thinkers are at the mercy of what they're exposed to, they'll conclude in favour of whatever was the most recent outcome, based on whatever material comes their way. No need to convince with arguments, just show occurrences that conclude the way you want. The public will naturally process everything the way you wanted them to anyway — Judaka
These so-called critical thinkers are at the mercy of what they're exposed to, they'll conclude in favour of whatever was the most recent outcome, based on whatever material comes their way. No need to convince with arguments, just show occurrences that conclude the way you want. The public will naturally process everything the way you wanted them to anyway. — Judaka
In studying history, because we're precisely not analysing isolated incidents in a vacuum, it should be difficult to fall into the trap my OP describes. In any case, you can still employ methods likely to produce predictive value while studying history, it's the logic that needs to be (or is theoretically reasoned to be) predictively useful. There should be an explanation that would have predictive value and some method of determining whether that value is or isn't there.The antithesis of academic historians' efforts. — jgill
I'm talking about unproven logic formed during the environment created by hindsight being taken as validated by offering a reasonable, or unreasonable explanation of why something occurred. — Judaka
Religion, sports, war, politics, business, news, cultural commentary, you name it, it's everywhere. — Judaka
However, I don't want that for my example. I want:
1) To know the result beforehand
2) To never have to take my analysis outside of this isolated incident
3) For my analysis to speak for itself without having to produce results of any kind — Judaka
How could the West not foresee Putin was dangerous!? Look at this highly specific analysis using only points which lead towards the conclusion of Putin being dangerous, it was all there for anyone to see at any time! — Judaka
In social media, news, forums, and many other formats, things don't really work that way. The court of public opinion latches onto appealing reasoning which sounds intuitive or reasonable, especially when the recent results support that reasoning (which of course they will). So, that's where it's a problem. — Judaka
In social media, news, forums, and many other formats, things don't really work that way. The court of public opinion latches onto appealing reasoning which sounds intuitive or reasonable, especially when the recent results support that reasoning (which of course they will). So, that's where it's a problem — Judaka
How do you separate good analysis from useless analysis without assessing for predictive value? — Judaka
Which is the exact thing that I'm criticising in this thread as being pointless. — Judaka
the value of your efforts needs to help predict outcomes or it's useless. — Judaka
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