They are right, I think. People don’t have endless time to discuss things with everyone. You put a statement on the table. Now I look at it and superficially see that it’s some sort of economics statement. Now should I waste my time examining your standpoint further? Can I expect to get well founded opinions from you? Will I profit from this exchange? If I can verify that you indeed have spent a long time thinking about economics and other people have considered your economy related thinking processes good enough to give you a diploma, then I can expect to get valuable opinions from you.
It’s not sure, but one has to filter out all the cranks. Asking for qualifications is one way. There are thousands of unqualified people who have their own refutations of relativity, or false proofs of P!=NP etc. Should we really give equal time to all of these people, just because they might be onto something?
You seem to look at yourself from the inside and say well I’m an honest and smart guy, why won’t they listen to me? But for them you’re just a random guy, nobody can see your inner qualities that you think you possess. If you want to become better than a “random guy from the street”, you need to provide some evidence that you’re worth listening to.
People always treat you for how you appear to the outside. It’s the same fallacy that people commit when they say “I want someone to love me for who I am inside, not for any of my attributes like my body type, job, money, sense of humor, intelligence, musical talent etc., but for the inner me”. There’s no inner you for us. Only what you do.
People don’t have endless time to discuss things with everyone...
You are right, many people just want to make sure they are not wasting their time, but when they come back with “if you are not an expert then your conclusion is false” I think they are showing that time was not their priority, but just to state the claim was false.
If they came back with “I prefer to talk to an expert” or “how can I believe you?” it would indicate what you say above.
Also, I simplified above with a simple claim as my starting statement. Normally a claim is below an article that already explains the issue and I may affirm that with the addition of my opinion.
For example after this article about the war on science on National Geographic:
Well, you need to decide if it’s worth discussing further. Anonymous internet comment sections are often very low quality (tribalism, astroturfing, trolling etc.). If you think they are just trolling you, then ignore them. If you think they want to have a discussion, then you should defend your point or concede that you just stated a layman’s opinion.
Comments don’t have the space to put your own academic paper there defending what you claim.
They are right, I think. People don’t have endless time to discuss things with everyone. You put a statement on the table. Now I look at it and superficially see that it’s some sort of economics statement. Now should I waste my time examining your standpoint further? Can I expect to get well founded opinions from you? Will I profit from this exchange? If I can verify that you indeed have spent a long time thinking about economics and other people have considered your economy related thinking processes good enough to give you a diploma, then I can expect to get valuable opinions from you.
It’s not sure, but one has to filter out all the cranks. Asking for qualifications is one way. There are thousands of unqualified people who have their own refutations of relativity, or false proofs of P!=NP etc. Should we really give equal time to all of these people, just because they might be onto something?
You seem to look at yourself from the inside and say well I’m an honest and smart guy, why won’t they listen to me? But for them you’re just a random guy, nobody can see your inner qualities that you think you possess. If you want to become better than a “random guy from the street”, you need to provide some evidence that you’re worth listening to.
People always treat you for how you appear to the outside. It’s the same fallacy that people commit when they say “I want someone to love me for who I am inside, not for any of my attributes like my body type, job, money, sense of humor, intelligence, musical talent etc., but for the inner me”. There’s no inner you for us. Only what you do.
You are right, many people just want to make sure they are not wasting their time, but when they come back with “if you are not an expert then your conclusion is false” I think they are showing that time was not their priority, but just to state the claim was false.
If they came back with “I prefer to talk to an expert” or “how can I believe you?” it would indicate what you say above.
Also, I simplified above with a simple claim as my starting statement. Normally a claim is below an article that already explains the issue and I may affirm that with the addition of my opinion.
For example after this article about the war on science on National Geographic:
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2015/03/science-doubters/achenbach-text
I may just write a comment:
We have a huge bias towards intuitive conclusions rather than taking the time to understand the facts.
Then someone might write “are you a psychiatrist?”. I respond “no” and they follow with a “then you don’t know what you are talking about”.
Well, you need to decide if it’s worth discussing further. Anonymous internet comment sections are often very low quality (tribalism, astroturfing, trolling etc.). If you think they are just trolling you, then ignore them. If you think they want to have a discussion, then you should defend your point or concede that you just stated a layman’s opinion.
Comments don’t have the space to put your own academic paper there defending what you claim.