|
|
|
|
|
by mekoka
610 days ago
|
|
The data-driven human is a particularly annoying fallacy of our times. There seems to be a bias at play here. The ethos of the person that identifies as "rational" and whose trust in the data makes them seem smart. The result is this increased prevalence of people who think that ignoring the feedback of their subjective experience for the most mundane phenomenon, just because "where's the data", is somehow rational. It's even more amazing to see this at play in domains that are directly tied with your well-being, where there's abundant anecdata, but people are holding out until very long and very expensive research have made a pronouncement. Like, thousands of people claim this particular herb is {$positive_claim}. I could try it for a week and see for myself, but I think I'll hold on to my 10$ and wait until research confirms this by the time I turn 90. Another aspect of this fallacy is nicely highlighted by the aphorism Not everything that counts can be measured. Not everything measured counts. |
|