The answer to this is simply to teach kids, starting in elementary school, to not simply believe someting just because someone says it. That includes teaching them to not simply believe what teachers, parents, etc. say just because they say it. — Terrapin Station
The answer to this is simply to teach kids, starting in elementary school, to not simply believe someting just because someone says it. That includes teaching them to not simply believe what teachers, parents, etc. say just because they say it. — Terrapin Station
The problem with that is that we have to simply believe what others say all the time. — zookeeper
You're not thinking that I'm saying that things aren't the case just because someone says them, are you? — Terrapin Station
Right. So what does the fact that for practicalities' sake, we have to do many things simply on the word of others have to do with my comment? — Terrapin Station
So you'd teach to believe things just because someone says them? (At least with respect to some people?) — Terrapin Station
Actually, I regularly challenged both teachers and parents on various things, with the support of my parents. Did I challenge everything? No. That's not at all implied by realizing that something isn't the case just because someone is claiming it is.
I find it distasteful and irresponsible that you'd teach kids that something is the case just because someone says it is. — Terrapin Station
Do you trust the weatherman when he tells you it's going to rain tomorrow? — Benkei
If you really are so complacent as to teach children that it is ok to simply take someone's word for it, even though they may be qualified to the hilt to give that word, then you are doing them a huge disservice. — Barry Etheridge
No source should ever go unchecked, no teacher should ever appoint themselves the guardian of all knowledge.
Else nobody can tell when they are, as they inevitably will be (it is estimated that 90% of all current knowledge will be shown at some point in the future to be erroneous, inaccurate, or inadequate). just plain wrong.
We trust the weatherman he says it's going to rain tomorrow. Because we trust the barometers to work (and the guy who built it said it was accurate), — Benkei
This would not be asserting that something is the case just because someone says that it is, though, would it? — Terrapin Station
Pretty much no one ever asserts that something is true because someone says it is. — zookeeper
.Using precise psychological terms, [Pope Fancis] said scandal-mongering media risked falling prey to coprophilia, or arousal from excrement, and consumers of these media risked coprophagia, or eating excrement
... disinformation as the greatest harm the media can do because “it directs opinion in only one direction and omits the other part of the truth,”...
- The actual danger is that it's truly disinformation intended on subversion done or sponsored by another country. And there's a lot of evidence that one country (no need to say which) has been especially active in these kind of "active measures" aktivnyje meroprijatija with striking success. — ssu
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