| You're talking yout of your ass. In preparation for vietnam, the US armed forces studied lethality of intent for small arms fire. Vietnam was the dataset, which has since been further validated. The cited text was written by a professor at west point, he's not full of shit. Data (roughly) for effectivenes / lethal intent: Population (normal): 5% Soldier (WWII era): 20% Soldier (Current Era): 95% These are anectdotally referenced in the linked article, but they are discussed in that article's main citation, which is here: Publication Date: November 1, 1996 | ISBN-10: 0316330116 | ISBN-13: 978-0316330114 | Edition: 1 [Amazon.com] Lt. Col. Dave Grossman draws unsettling, even sinister parallels between the psychological conditioning required to make soldiers kill in war and the similar effect that videos, films, games and movies have in civilian society. This book is/was a textbook used in the armed forces, it is a summary of working papers etc. It is not some BS handwavey claptrap from academia. What you will notice from reading it is it is actually very difficult to get people to Kill one another. That is why the data on effectiveness are so damning. |
And you are perfectly scientifically illiterate.
> In preparation for vietnam, the US armed forces studied lethality of intent for small arms fire.
Yes, they did, But it was not a scientific study -- no control group. No basis for comparing results. No basis for falsification. As a result, they "discovered" exactly what they expected to discover.
The entire Vietnam episode was based on the opinions of experts, not scientific study. And I am hardly the only one to make this observation.
> This book is/was a textbook used in the armed forces, it is a summary of working papers etc.
Yes, and it is not science. I now realize I'm talking to someone who doesn't understand what makes science science. And that is ... drum roll ... falsifiable theoretical claims, claims that someone could in principle conclusively falsify in practical tests. There are none in the book you cite -- it's a sequence of anecdotes and philosophical speculations.
> It is not some BS handwavey claptrap from academia.
I agree with the "from academia" part -- but it is certainly contentless philosophical speculation rather than science. There are no testable, falsifiable claims between its covers.