I see it lists memetics, hypnosis and subliminal perception as pseudoscience. I’d put >50% on each of these being a real phenomenon.
I think for areas like these we should distinguish between believing a popular myth (eg. Hypnotized assassins, James Vicary’s “Eat Popcorn”) versus believing the phenomenon exists at all.
I see it lists memetics, hypnosis and subliminal perception as pseudoscience. I’d put >50% on each of these being a real phenomenon.
I think for areas like these we should distinguish between believing a popular myth (eg. Hypnotized assassins, James Vicary’s “Eat Popcorn”) versus believing the phenomenon exists at all.
Well, that’s why I added the qualifier “too many”.