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by tarsinge
3113 days ago
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It depends of the issues we are talking of. What I'm saying is that introducing biology at this point in the debate, by looking if the inequality is "natural" because phenotype A or chromosome B gives you some edge or not in science or other discipline, is kind of irrelevant given the weight of culture in our societies. I find it even dangerous because I don't think a lot of people are ready to understand the subtleties of a shift in a normal distribution (if one is present), and it'll just give them a wrong/misused "scientific" evidence for reinforcing their prejudices. Because I can't teach critical thinking in minutes I now resort to "it's always cultural" and try to move the debate forward to the (IMHO) main causes. (not a native english speaker so sorry if I missed your point) |
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I would even say that, if you don't know the science about an issue, it might be the wisest to refrain from having a strong position on a matter, at all.
Sure, many people do not understand statistics, I would dare postulate many many scientists don't properly understand stats ;)
But, if we do away with the science domain, people will resort to another domain, which is normally trumped in debates by scientific arguments. And that is, anecdotal evidence. And people will use it just as much and as falsely to defend their believes.
(no worries, not a native speaker either :) )