| ▲ | AshamedCaptain 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
"feels good to me" and "helps me sleep more easily" are about the same thing: flimsy and almost non-quantifiable personal experiences. About the same level with "I dream of nicer things". > And many, many other people have written that it does the same for them. So people write for homeopathy. Homepathy actually is the precursor for using this type of "evidence" for development and study of new "drugs" (hint: this evidence ends up going nowhere useful, quickly). > Or soothing music. Or bedtime stories. Because the funding usually isn't there to perform the kind of large-scale studies required to establish these things, because it's just not a priority or even a good use of our dollars. Oh, there is. There are way more studies about this than you can possibly think of. There are medical journals reporting clinical experiences about this daily. You are saying this on an article about study about one of these, ironically enough. > And lack of evidence for, is not the same as evidence against. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell%27s_teapot > My point is, nothing in this article does establish that it is "actually bullshit". Why not? > But for some reason, low amber lighting to help with sleep makes you and the article author upset? Why? Why does that make you upset, but not hot tea or lullabyes? Or do those make you upset too? You are the one who suddenly claims this makes people "anti-science", when this particular bullshit is not even 20 years old, and it was already known to be suspect 20 years ago. It is just ridiculous that it is now suddenly such a core belief of your persona that even being reminded that it is most likely bullshit is going to drive you to reject science outright. As I said, I could at least _understand_ (but not justify) much older claims, such as ancient chinese practices or whatever. This makes they make me upset indeed (this is pseudoscience, after all), but what makes me even more upset is the creation of new pseudo-scientific or even anti-scientific "popular wisdom" _in this age_. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | crazygringo 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I think you have not actually understood what I wrote, because of this part: >> My point is, nothing in this article does establish that it is "actually bullshit". > Why not? I've already said it multiple times. Allow me to repeat myself: > make the elemental mistake that showing one biological mechanism doesn't have an effect, means no other mechanisms can either. You've written a lot, but you haven't understood that this is the core mistake of the article, and the core mistake of what you're trying to argue. You reply with a reference to Russell's teapot, and that would be fine if you were merely trying to make the point that the effect of amber light on sleep has not been sufficiently proven. But you're the one literally calling it "bullshit", i.e. disproven. That's wrong. There's no high-quality study conclusively demonstrating it doesn't have an effect. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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