Then why the praise? If they've not done something ethically praiseworthy? Are just personally pleased with them? — Isaac
OK. So, same question but for laymen. what's the advantage to society in have all the laymen follow the advice that it most likely to be right (as opposed to having some of them follow the second most likely, third most likely etc.)? — Isaac
Is it better to be on the right side of the truth or not?
— Xtrix
Woah. When did 'Truth' enter into it? — Isaac
Neither of those things are a statement about what we ought to do. They are both statements of fact. — Isaac
To get an action out them we need an objective, and a value system to weigh it against other objectives. Do you have experts in those things? — Isaac
You'll find most nutritionists say you should outright never eat McDonalds. Others will say it's OK a few times a year -- in other words, in moderation. Do any suggest you should eat fast food "as often as you like"? I'm sure very few, but you could probably find them
— Xtrix
Find one then. — Isaac
the vast majority of doctors and scientists are encouraging vaccinations. Around 96% of doctors have gotten the vaccine themselves.
— Xtrix
Again, in what way can a doctor be an expert in which values are most important, such that they can give an expert opinion on what one ought to do? — Isaac
There are almost no experts who question the use of vaccines
— Xtrix
That's just bullshit. — Isaac
There are winning players who don't know a thing about game theory, and yet they win. That's not just random chance and lucky guessing; they're making the mathematically/theoretically "correct" moves, but they're doing so by incorporating things like instinct, intuition, sensitivity to psychological data, the ability to read people, etc. Whatever the source of these instincts, I think they deserve some credit for having them in the first place. — Xtrix
If most laypeople in the United States, who know nothing about vaccines, virology, microbiology, biochemistry, medicine, molecular biology, immunology, epidemiology, etc. etc., would listen to what these experts are saying and take the vaccine, then that would be a very great advantage indeed -- for everyone. — Xtrix
But the question is an odd one anyway. It's like asking: "What's the advantage of having everyone put their money on something with a 70% chance of winning instead of a 20% chance or 10% chance?" — Xtrix
It's true that smoking increases the likelihood of getting cancer. It's true that anthropogenic climate change is happening. It's true that vaccines are highly effective at combating COVID. It's true that masks help slow the spread of the virus.
Many people outright deny all of the above, largely because they believe the wrong people. People and things which I mentioned above -- quack doctors, Facebook memes, YouTube stars, bloggers, Twitter users, bogus websites, etc. — Xtrix
I confess, I make the assumption that most people want to go on living. — Xtrix
The question is a matter of who they're listening to. Eventually it'll be right in front of them: they'll get COVID themselves — Xtrix
That's like saying "find someone who says climate change is a hoax." Equally ridiculous. — Xtrix
Again, in what way can a doctor be an expert in which values are most important, such that they can give an expert opinion on what one ought to do? — Isaac
Are you serious? — Xtrix
In case it's not clear: none of those doctors are questioning the use of vaccines. If you believe recommendations about appropriate ages to get the vaccine is equivalent to "questioning the use of vaccines," you've really misread my statement. Which is a striking misreading. — Xtrix
You share the same air, water, food sources, economy, oil reserves, enemies (sometimes), future... If Bob is unemployed the cost of labour is reduced because there's a demand for jobs. that means the manufacturer has to pay less for labour which means you get cheaper products. No state necessary, you benefit from bob's unemployment. — Isaac
I think if the government wanted to take what it believed to be it's property, it wouldn't have too hard a time doing so without violence — Isaac
How did they obtain the goods? No violence, so they what? Just found them? — Isaac
That's the situation you're in. state or not, because you live with others. again, if all you want to do is whine about how difficult life is, then we'll just stop here. — Isaac
I don't share those things any more than I share it with Mr. Liuang on the other side of the world. — Tzeentch
I don't feel that connection in the same way you might. I deal with people in my vicinity - people whose interests I can properly understand and aren't statistical abstractions. — Tzeentch
Ok, so why do governments historically and temporarily rely on (threats of) violence if they don't have to? — Tzeentch
How did they obtain the goods? No violence, so they what? Just found them? — Isaac
Yes, why wouldn't that be possible?
Natural resources used to be up for grabs before states started claiming all of it en masse, with all the consequences that has brought. — Tzeentch
Your opinion seems to be that there are no alternatives for the problems I have laid out, and that I should just stop whining about then. — Tzeentch
Whether you 'feel' a connection doesn't have any bearing on whether one exists. — Isaac
It's a lot easier, for a start. I doubt they have as much moral qualms about doing so as you do. — Isaac
But that's not the argument you're making, the argument you're making is about the rightful ownership of the taxed portion of your pay. — Isaac
The stealing of land by force from those who originally made use of it pre-dates states by several hundred thousand years. — Isaac
Not to mention the fact that our current population density and current place in such a long complex history, makes any return to such a state impossible - again I'm not entertaining childish whinging here. — Isaac
Yes, that is exactly the argument. — Isaac
The assessment by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) is that the health benefits from vaccination are marginally greater than the potential known harms. However, the margin of benefit is considered too small to support universal vaccination of healthy 12 to 15 year olds at this time.
1) This is official advice, not going against it
But your only criteria for identifying these people is that they win. That's not the criteria you're using here. The criteria you're using here is that they trust the same people you trust for the same reasons. Winning has not entered into it. — Isaac
If most laypeople in the United States, who know nothing about vaccines, virology, microbiology, biochemistry, medicine, molecular biology, immunology, epidemiology, etc. etc., would listen to what these experts are saying and take the vaccine, then that would be a very great advantage indeed -- for everyone.
— Xtrix
This just assumes the question of discussion. — Isaac
But the question is an odd one anyway. It's like asking: "What's the advantage of having everyone put their money on something with a 70% chance of winning instead of a 20% chance or 10% chance?"
— Xtrix
Yes, that's exactly the question I'm asking. — Isaac
All true. What's that got to do with the ethical question of whether one ought to take the vaccine? — Isaac
I confess, I make the assumption that most people want to go on living.
— Xtrix
Then why do people skydive? — Isaac
I very much doubt there is a nutritionist out there who says you can eat the quantity of junk food most Americans eat who does not have a clear bias — Isaac
It's clear that a doctor cannot provide a judgement about what one ought to do, they provide medical facts. What one ought to do about those facts is a separate question which a doctor is no more qualified to answer than you are. — Isaac
I confess, I make the assumption that most people want to go on living.
— Xtrix
Then why do people skydive? I don't know what kind of people you associate with, but in my experience going on living is not even in the top ten. People want to enjoy themselves, have sex, relax, learn new things, have a group of friends, taste nice food, make meaningful relationships, see beauty, stamp their identity on the world, play a part in something bigger then them...Maybe the mundane act of going on on living comes 11th at best. — Isaac
This is an example of bad faith, I think. — Xtrix
I wonder how many people have died as a result of this type of "thinking"? — James Riley
We don't have to wonder -- it's happening right now, all around us. And people like Isaac help it along -- which is unfortunate. — Xtrix
has been a doubling down on a mistake which those who have participated in it find themselves unable to admit to—principally governments and media but the general population included. — AJJ
Yes, and those questions have been answered, numerous times. If you're unaware of them, it's because you're unwilling to find them -- nothing more. — Xtrix
Vaccination is likely to substantially reduce virus transmission by reducing the pool of people who become infected, and reducing virus levels in people who get infected.
True, there could be a vast global conspiracy involved. — Xtrix
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