| ▲ | drugstorecowboy a day ago | |||||||
Oh absolutely, we don't need "science" and "evidence" to decide what to do, it's so much easier to use the "well I just know it" standard. Historically, that kind of thinking created a wonderful utopia, I have no idea why we have abandoned it in modernity. I mean seriously, think of the children! | ||||||||
| ▲ | remarkEon 17 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I do, in fact, know it. For five 9s of human history we did not need a bunch of nerds in a classroom to tell us what to do. I have no idea how this happened, where everyone is suddenly terrified of being confident in their own observable reality and needs and endless stream of academic papers - often written, again, by people with zero functional experience in the domains they write about - to confirm their decision making for them. No, I can literally just collect my own data and make my own decisions. Here’s an example of the motivated reasoning in this essay, providing a clue about why the author is pretending you can’t make a decision without listening to “The Experts”: > We also know that young people’s relationship with social media is complex, as it provides them essential spaces for civic engagement, identity exploration, and community building Complete and total bullshit. This essays acts like no social activity occurred before we figured out how to send 1s and 0s along wires we hang on our houses. Separately, I wish do address your tone. You are intentionally not engaging with the idea that normal people do not need a mountain of over credentialed experts to explain things to them, which is in itself interesting. Do you need a study that says you’re allowed to? | ||||||||
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