Others have covered your knee jerk poison-is-bad reaction so I’ll let that pass, but the thing that stuck out for me as bad epistemic standards from MMS proponents was seeing some “explanation” for why it would give you an upset stomach despite the other claim that it would only harm “bad” bacteria. Something about how it’s your body flushing out poisons and it’s a good sign. It struck me as an untested rationalisation someone just made up.
People sometimes seem to use a model that says that potency is a scalar quantity. If you have a powerful illness, you need a powerful medicine to defeat it. Weak medicine has little side effects; powerful medicine has big side effects. So if something has big side effects, that means you know it is powerful medicine!
People use a similar model for computer security: Installing antivirus, a firewall, or other security features gives your computer some number of security points. Like armor class in D&D, the more security points you have, the harder it is for an attacker or malware to hurt you. If you install a lot of security stuff, it will make you really safe … and you can safely go do dangerous things like installing software that fell off the back of a truck, or browsing spammy porn sites with IE6.
The problem in both cases is an ignorance of how the attacks work, and thus how the defenses have to work, too. An arbitrary chemical that has heavy “side effects” is not thereby a potent remedy for infections, cancer, wounds, and other diverse afflictions. Malware and attackers use specific exploits and tricks; in order to make your computer safe from a specific attack, security software has to block particular things.
And unlike in classic D&D, putting on a helmet doesn’t make it any harder to run you through with a lance.
Others have covered your knee jerk poison-is-bad reaction so I’ll let that pass, but the thing that stuck out for me as bad epistemic standards from MMS proponents was seeing some “explanation” for why it would give you an upset stomach despite the other claim that it would only harm “bad” bacteria. Something about how it’s your body flushing out poisons and it’s a good sign. It struck me as an untested rationalisation someone just made up.
People sometimes seem to use a model that says that potency is a scalar quantity. If you have a powerful illness, you need a powerful medicine to defeat it. Weak medicine has little side effects; powerful medicine has big side effects. So if something has big side effects, that means you know it is powerful medicine!
People use a similar model for computer security: Installing antivirus, a firewall, or other security features gives your computer some number of security points. Like armor class in D&D, the more security points you have, the harder it is for an attacker or malware to hurt you. If you install a lot of security stuff, it will make you really safe … and you can safely go do dangerous things like installing software that fell off the back of a truck, or browsing spammy porn sites with IE6.
The problem in both cases is an ignorance of how the attacks work, and thus how the defenses have to work, too. An arbitrary chemical that has heavy “side effects” is not thereby a potent remedy for infections, cancer, wounds, and other diverse afflictions. Malware and attackers use specific exploits and tricks; in order to make your computer safe from a specific attack, security software has to block particular things.
And unlike in classic D&D, putting on a helmet doesn’t make it any harder to run you through with a lance.