Motley wrote:Doesn't it just boil down to don't believe all the s!te you are told?![]()
I know it is getting a lot of positive reviews but it just seems to be stating the obvious to me.
And I think you have to TRY techniques as written, but that is not the same as assuming they are 'right' after all it's still only one guys opinion at the end of the day. I think you can still question a technique, test it, and not use it it it does not suit you.
Motley wrote:Doesn't it just boil down to don't believe all the s!te you are told?![]()
I know it is getting a lot of positive reviews but it just seems to be stating the obvious to me.
Michael Chidester wrote:Motley wrote:Doesn't it just boil down to don't believe all the s!te you are told?![]()
I know it is getting a lot of positive reviews but it just seems to be stating the obvious to me.
Did you actually read the article? That's the main point, but most of it addresses other, tangential issues which are far more interesting.
Ariella Elema wrote:As I understand the article, it's saying that not believing everything you're told is also an epistemic vice.
Ariella Elema wrote:The author is raising a more complicated question: how do you develop a system to evaluate what you're told, incorporate new discoveries and reject unworkable ideas? How do you do this in a field where controlled scientific experimentation would be unethical?
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