• 3 Posts
  • 12 Comments
Joined 12 days ago
cake
Cake day: July 2nd, 2024

help-circle







  • this shouldn’t be the main argument because people don’t really care about it now but it can be a nice secondary one

    I do think that recommendation algorithms are a big culprit for the widespread scrolling addiction epidemic. Smart phones and social media platforms have positioned the population in readiness to consume ads and propaganda. So, I think this is definitely among the main arguments.

    Plus note people were arguably repulsed when it was leaked that Facebook performed a sentiment analysis psychological experiment on them.





  • Layman statistics is not the hill I would die on. Otherwise (being guilty of the fallacy myself) I now think that making a subject mandatory school lesson will only make people more confidently incorrect about it, so this is another hill I won’t die on for probability and statistics. See for instance the widespread erroneous layman use of “statistical significance” (like “your sample of partners is not statistical significant”) you see it is a lost cause. They misinterpret it because they were taught it. Also professionals have been taught it and mess it up more than regularly to the point we can’t trust studies or sth any more. So the solution you suggest is teach more of it? Sounds a bit like the war on drugs.