Message from @Σ5
Discord ID: 620894609182294016
@Σ5 You agree that if someone is gonna come with a label on your paper that you made, you would expect some evidence behind it with direct quotes or procedures that you took? Nope, not one evidence of it. All they did it was call it those terms with no further backing.
it was most likely a vote not a single person decision
Appeal to authority is very hypocritical. Who cares what a person labels it as, what cares is the evidence as to why they label it as it.
But you seem to care about the labels more than the evidence which they never presented.
never endorced apeal to authority
'' A bunch of people said those terms therefore those terms are correct '' is pretty much appeal to authority.
they need a way to systamaticly clasify the papers
they need to lable it to be more efficient
Better to be immune to a series of deadly illnesses than having some adjuvants in your body
thats apeal to popularity
wich is ok if you know how the people do the process
I thought you were talking about the doctors that took the vote which would be appeal to authority.
you cant be absolutly sure but sure enugh
i am
All I'm asking is for you to present evidence behind to those terms and not just take it up because some authority said it so. Critical thinking is very much needed today for this kind of stuff.
im just saying whats possible
That's fair, don't you think they should present the evidence when labeling the paper those terms? Wouldn't it be unjust for the anti-vaxxer doctor to get his license revoked and paper falsified with no further evidence?
they should
at least an attached explanation
a rundown at least
they might
That's what I thought too, but I never saw anything else. https://www.publichealth.org/public-awareness/understanding-vaccines/vaccine-myths-debunked/
>Myth #1: Vaccines cause autism.
The widespread fear that vaccines increase risk of autism originated with a 1997 study published by Andrew Wakefield, a British surgeon. The article was published in The Lancet, a prestigious medical journal, suggesting that the measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine was increasing autism in British children.
The paper has since been completely discredited due to serious procedural errors, undisclosed financial conflicts of interest, and ethical violations. Andrew Wakefield lost his medical license and the paper was retracted from The Lancet.
thats a basic site that i see no reason to adress it in full
i was thinking like a formal site where they adress the papers
maybe the site itself where teh papers are posted
If you read further they say that the thing has taken seriously and addressed, and they did other studies
dont expect it to go into depth on that site
Appeal to authority again, they never mentioned what the further studies or papers that they conducted were. No specifications. Look at it from a neutral POV @ksucc 🌙
If you ask the doctor who did the study they will probably send all the things but we don’t know who is
@ksucc 🌙 You basically agree to those terms because someone said so and not the evidence presented?
Well There is
Pretty sure not every doctor is aware of every study that has taken place.
Where is it?
There is an article
Listed on that page
That article is for a whole other subject, it doesn't refute the anti-vaxxer main paper.
https://www.jpeds.com/article/S0022-3476(13)00144-3/pdf?ext=.pdf
It proves that vaccines don’t cause autism
I mean, in the scientific community, if you can prove that a theory is flawed, this can justify why they said there are procedural errors in the first theory, also ethical violations
I just looked over the paper, ''The initial concerns that vaccines may cause autism were related to the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine1 and
thimerosal-containing vaccines.2 In 2004, a comprehensive review by the Institute of Medicine concluded that the
evidence favors rejection of possible causal associations between each of these vaccine types and autism.3''
The 3rd source leads to https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK25344/