To be pro-vax has no upfront cost. To be antivax has a huge upfront cost. It comes with ostracization and belittlement. After paying that, there is nowhere to go except further in the rabbit hole. — khaled
I think there is such a convergence concerning childhood vaccination , despite your naysayers. — Joshs
No, there are already plenty of polls out there — Joshs
suss out contrarian opinions and see how the medical mainstream responds to them. — Joshs
I didnt say the dominant paradigm is more useful than all the alternatives , only that it has to be respected for convincing its many adherents that it is the most useful approach. In that sense it has earned its stripes — Joshs
The reason we’re dealing with so many climate change deniers and anti-vaxxers is that they don’t believe there is a legitimate consensus. That is, they either dispute the numbers of experts who are on board , or impugn their motives. — Joshs
Kuhn did indeed set pen to paper , and what did he say? He said that choice of paradigms was essentially an aesthetic choice. There’s merit in aesthetics. — Joshs
They paid a very heavy price by disagreeing with the obvious and looking stupid to the majority. So now they can't go back and admit they were wrong. Or all that suffering and humiliation would be for nothing. — khaled
Perhaps that’s something to discuss with your doctor. — Xtrix
The fact remains: vaccines are safe and effective. There are extremely rare cases when they’re not— just as there are extremely rare cases where places crash. — Xtrix
this isn’t solely about you. As I’ll repeatedly remind everyone. — Xtrix
Let's ignore any selfish aims for now. My relative risk of causing harm to others by getting a vaccine compared to not getting one. — Isaac
I'm not sure that what we clumsily call the "belief" that there are "external objects" is up to us, no matter how much physicists futz with the definition of "object". Ditto for space, time, who knows what else. — Srap Tasmaner
What interests me about this is not that we might be able to generate a contradiction or a paradox by constructing some peculiar class, something you'd only think of when doing this kind of analysis; what interests me is that even if we agree that the whole idea of a class turns out to be kind of useless, since there aren't any objects for them to be classes of, we can keep talking in terms of classes, and apparently keep making sense. Whether we could give up classes -- I doubt that can be made sense of, but maybe there's a sort of Funes-the-Memorius way of individualizing absolutely everything. At any rate, it looks like no matter how we undermine them, classes will still hang around cheerfully offering their services. ("Won't be needing you today, or ever -- you're not real, you're just a manner of speaking." "I'll just wait over here, then, shall I? In case you change your mind.") — Srap Tasmaner
You're still classifying, but refusing to name the classes you're using. Making them anonymous is pointless, and a maybe little disingenuous. (You can kind of kid yourself that you're keeping the model you're using at arm's length.) On the one hand, it's as if it's only the name, not the classifying, that we're worried about; on the other, the name plays a role, and we ought to look at that. — Srap Tasmaner
It's not punishment, it is making sure that you face the consequences of your own behavior. — T Clark
Why yeah, it doesn't include tarot reading or the position of Saturn in Virgo, if that's what you have in mind. — Olivier5
There is no force in the world that can convince you to accept some data that you want to reject. — Olivier5
A language community in part imposes its language on the world. We talk in terms of balls and stuff that is not balls. Like Anscombe's shopping list, we use the words to pick out things in the world, or we use it to to list the things we have. Both are equally legitimate, and each relies on the other. — Banno
My inclination here too is to say that my brain's model of the world, and I'm guessing everyone's, pretty clearly treats apples as objects, paradigmatic objects, if apples aren't objects then nothing is. — Srap Tasmaner
It's a matter of accepting that the models in our heads are how we understand the world and knowing that they're models doesn't change that. — Srap Tasmaner
The theories we work through consciously, we get a bit more say in, including how we theorize the models in our heads. — Srap Tasmaner
But you have to link up distrust with "as few people as possible" in some specific way. Is it because the vaccine might actually be poison and you want as few people as possible to be poisoned? Is it because the seller is making money per dose, and you want them to make as little money as possible? — Srap Tasmaner
What difference could other thoughts about pharmaceutical companies make here? There's no room for "You need the vaccine, but ..." and no need for "You don't need the vaccine, plus ..." — Srap Tasmaner
to counter the (otherwise reasonable) all-in-it-together argument which might have everyone taking the vaccine to show solidarity with the group who actually need to. — Isaac
Yes, my interest is in consensus of epidemiological advice to policy makers. — Joshs
I want to hitch my wagon to the most popular starting assumptions. — Joshs
The most popular starting assumption ( dominant paradigm) earns its stripes by offering a particularly useful way of interpreting empirical phenomena. — Joshs
What about the second? "It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about ___." What on earth do we fill in the blank with? — Srap Tasmaner
I think that's a misunderstanding of what "X" -- as a name or a label -- is doing in the first place. Isaac and I went around and around about this before: it's no use saying "tables are only part of my model" as a way of saying "tables aren't real"; that's a category mistake. The whole point of modelling is that within the model, tables quite specifically count as real. Real is theory-relative. — Srap Tasmaner
see if you agree — Srap Tasmaner
I presented an argument that your distrust of pharmaceutical companies is a reason for no one to get vaccinated, and is inconsistent with a belief that some people should. You tried to manage this inconsistency in your first response by resenting the fact that some people should trust vaccine vendors. — Srap Tasmaner
If he said the things it is claimed that he said, then there should be documentary evidence, no? — Janus
If ten people say that the truck involved in the accident was at fault and two say the car was at fault, who would you believe? — Janus
It's called scientific consensus, the basis of peer review. — Janus
I would say that anyone who does rely on him for advice would be well advised to find out if the claims about his claims are true. — Janus
I believe that if the majority of experts believe a certain thing then that is most likely, although obviously not guaranteed, out of the suite of opinions out there, to be correct. — Janus
The anti-realists failure to commit amounts to a failure to understand how language functions; "the ball" is the ball. — Banno
Evan if all we see is the way things seem to be to us, there may still be the way things are. — Banno
a realist says the ball has a mass of 1kg; the anti-realist might say that saying that it has a mass of 1kg is useful, or fits their perceptions, but will not commit to it being true. — Banno
I just wonder what you're supposed to say to someone who replies "no" to this. Whether it be by saying:
Tell that to a corpse. Or to a quadriplegic. Or to an overheating planet. Or ... — 180 Proof
Or "go stand in front of a train" etc. — khaled
If the claims made in that article about the claims Ionaddis made early on about the likely number of deaths due to covid and his dismissal of the idea that covid was anything more than a bad flu are true, then I don't think he's a reliable source of good insight. — Janus
what would be the point of those not traveling to such regions taking them? — Janus
Indeed the very idea that there's a way things actually are is just a way things seem to us to be. — Isaac
Tell that to a corpse. Or to a quadriplegic. Or to an overheating planet. Or ... — 180 Proof
Problem is, both positions are convinced that they’re “actually” talking about the way things are, not just what they seem to be. No realist will say “it seems to me realism is the case”. — khaled
it is telling that you must use the plural - "we" not "I", "Us" not "me". — Banno
When cognitive science can explain the social aspects of how things are, , it'll have reached maturity. — Banno
A cognitive scientists makes use of other folk's brains. — Banno
I'd hazard a guess that for any who think there's not an external cause of our representation, the argument rests not on some way things seem to them to be, but rather on the above meta argument (that everything is ultimately some way things seem to us to be) — Isaac
What I'm saying is that you never see outside of the mind-created world within which all the objects of perception exist. — Wayfarer
An ant-realist may in contrast hold — Banno
maybe YouTube's move is for the better. — jorndoe
You might want to look at this critique of Ionaddis — Janus
If you want the battle to be won, without your help (and the risk that helping entails), you have to hope that almost none of the other soldiers behave as rationally as you. (And you won't post your argument on the soldiers private chat.) — Srap Tasmaner
Thinking that everyone must be vaccinated is as scientifically flawed as thinking that nobody should.
My default assumption is that epidemiologists in general are in a better position than you are to make policy recommendations. — Joshs
The ability to Interpret research studies is only part of what is needed to make policy recommendations. — Joshs
I want to know what sorts of consensus there may or may not be be concerning such questions as the value of universal vaccination. Partly this is because I don’t have the time to read every study , and partly because I appreciate that there are other considerations besides the conclusiveness and validity of study results , considerations which can allow for reasonable recommendations even in the absence of definitive conclusions. — Joshs
Maybe you could point me in the direction of links to statements by epidemiologists who recommend against policies advocating or requiring vaccination of young people. — Joshs
Given uncertainty over risks I cannot foresee for now that there will be a recommendation for general vaccinations" in children, he said, adding that while the vaccine was shown to be effective, "practically nothing" was yet known over any long-term adverse effects in adolescents.
Vaccine escape is inevitable and I think that it adds to the argument not to have a blanket rollout of the vaccine to children aged 12-15 because I think that will minimise that. We should offer it to vulnerable children. But I don’t think that currently, the way it stands, that vaccine rollout to all of them is the way forward.
Decisions on which vaccines to purchase and which groups to target must be based on the highest quality analyses of vaccines in action, fully contextualised according to place and population and accounting for all relevant biases.
Aren’t the “peripheral’ claims, that vaccination reduces infection and most cases are in the unvaccinated, enough to support recommendations for vaccinating the young? — Joshs
Don’t forget another misconception that is being knocked down: — Joshs
The studies don't address transmission, as I mentioned above. They don't address viral loads in the nasal mucosa, they don't address viral load in asymptomatic cases, they don't address behavioural changes in vaccinated people, they don't address different responses in the full range of cohorts. — Isaac
this naïve profession of faith in the motives of a whole bunch of people you know nothing about. — Olivier5
Such expressions of gloom are great precisely because they make one feel superior to the unwashed, 'non-intellectual' masses. — Olivier5
This is now making the rounds again, being propagated and re-posted who knows where... — jorndoe
My money is on a very different idea than yours: a good number of COVID contratians are of the opinion that we're making too big a big fuss for a few thousands deaths, that the world is fundamentally Darwinian and tough luck if the weak die. I know that because they say so online, including here. — Olivier5
there's the desertion paradox, that no soldier's individual contribution to the outcome of a battle is so great that he should risk injury or death, therefore every individual soldier has rational grounds for deserting, even if he wants the battle to be won. But of course if every soldier behaves that way then the battle will certainly be lost. — Srap Tasmaner
