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by RetroTechie
1031 days ago
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Life's too short to check or even verify the many factoids you encounter in daily life. With: Check = check cited sources yourself. And Verify = re-do a study yourself. Outside of hard science like physics (and relatively simple experiments), in most cases that's not even possible. Especially history: original artifacts disappear, witnesses die & the places where things happened are changed. Written records are just that - what was written down. Accurate or not. This is true for ordinary people as well as scientists. Though I'd expect scientists to make a bit more effort (+ using field-specific knowledge to sort things out). But news reports tend to be notoriously unreliable imho. Especially popular media or (yuk) social media. If some science study is reported on, it's often enlightening to read that study yourself. And find it says very different things than the news reports. Or does not even say what's reported elsewhere. Bias, sensationalism & clickbait are a thing. |
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I've seen countless examples of "citations" that literally contradict their point. I can recall and exchange on reddit were someone smuggly claimed "they use science" when trying to make this crazy claim about how intermittent fasting is good for managing blood sugar and you should skip breakfast.
The citation said that people with blood sugar issues should always eat breakfast, and have small meals throughout the day. How did any of this help us get to truth?