|
RMN is Reader Supported
Our Goal for DEC 8 - JAN 5:
$1,450
Click Widget or Click Here to contribute.
Checks & Money Orders:
Raye Allan Smith
P.O. Box 95
Ashtabula, OH 44005
Users Online: 39
Who Founded
RMNews?
Dewitt Jones' Video

"Celebrate What's Right With The World"
"When the Starships Fly!"
Listen at YouTube
The
Theme for The Obergon Chronicles
Listen at YouTube
The Obergon Chronicles ebook
RUMOR MILL NEWS RADIO
CGI ROOM Common Ground Independent Media
WHAT ARE THE FACTIONS?
THE AMAZING RAYELAN ALLAN
BIORHYTHMS
LOTTO PICKS
OTHER WAYS TO DONATE
RUMOR MILL NEWS AGENTS WHO'VE BEEN INTERVIEWED ON RUMOR MILL NEWS
RADIO ______________
NOVEMBER 2008
Kevin Courtois - Kcbjedi
______________
Dr Robin Falkov
______________
Melinda Pillsbury Hr1
Melinda Pillsbury Hr2
______________
Daneen Peterson
______________
Daneen Peterson
______________
Disclosure Hr1
Disclosure Hr2
______________
Scribe
______________
in_PHI_nitti
______________
Jasmine Hr1
Jasmine Hr2
______________
Tom Chittum Hr1
Tom Chittum Hr2
______________
Kevin Courtois
______________
Dr Syberlux
______________
Gary Larrabee Hr1
Gary Larrabee Hr2
______________
Kevin Courtois
______________
Pravdaseeker Hr1
Pravdaseeker Hr2
______________
DECEMBER 2008
Tom Chittum
______________
Crystal River
______________
Stewart Swerdlow Hr1
Stewart Swerdlow Hr2
______________
Janet Swerdlow Hr1
Janet Swerdlow Hr2
______________
Dr. Robin Falkov Hr1
Dr. Robin Falkov Hr2
Dr. Robin Falkov Hr3
JANUARY 2009
______________
Patriotlad
______________
Patriotlad
______________
Crystal River
______________
Patriotlad
______________
Dr. Robin Falcov
______________
Patriotlad
FEBRUARY 2009
|
Find UFOs, The Apocalypse, New World Order, Political Analysis,
Alternative Health, Armageddon, Conspiracies, Prophecies,
Spirituality, Home Schooling, Home Mortgages and more, in:
Rumor Mill News Reading Room, Current Archive
Debunking The Debunkers: The Truth About The Half-Life Of Facts, Especially Established Facts...
Posted By: Watchman Date: Wednesday, 4-May-2016 22:30:15
www.rumormill.news/46111
In 2012, network scientist and data theorist Samuel Arbesman published a disturbing thesis: What we think of as established knowledge decays over time. According to his book “The Half-Life of Facts,” certain kinds of propositions that may seem bulletproof today will be forgotten by next Tuesday; one’s reality can end up out of date. Take, for example, the story of Popeye and his spinach.
Popeye loved his leafy greens and used them to obtain his super strength, Arbesman’s book explained, because the cartoon’s creators knew that spinach has a lot of iron. Indeed, the character would be a major evangelist for spinach in the 1930s, and it’s said he helped increase the green’s consumption in the U.S. by one-third. But this “fact” about the iron content of spinach was already on the verge of being obsolete, Arbesman said: In 1937, scientists realized that the original measurement of the iron in 100 grams of spinach — 35 milligrams — was off by a factor of 10. That’s because a German chemist named Erich von Wolff had misplaced a decimal point in his notebook back in 1870, and the goof persisted in the literature for more than half a century.
By the time nutritionists caught up with this mistake, the damage had been done. The spinach-iron myth stuck around in spite of new and better knowledge, wrote Arbesman, because “it’s a lot easier to spread the first thing you find, or the fact that sounds correct, than to delve deeply into the literature in search of the correct fact.”
Arbesman was not the first to tell the cautionary tale of the missing decimal point. The same parable of sloppy science, and its dire implications, appeared in a book called “Follies and Fallacies in Medicine,” a classic work of evidence-based skepticism first published in 1989.1 It also appeared in a volume of “Magnificent Mistakes in Mathematics,” a guide to “The Practice of Statistics in the Life Sciences” and an article in an academic journal called “The Consequence of Errors.” And that’s just to name a few.
All these tellings and retellings miss one important fact: The story of the spinach myth is itself apocryphal. It’s true that spinach isn’t really all that useful as a source of iron, and it’s true that people used to think it was. But all the rest is false: No one moved a decimal point in 1870; no mistake in data entry spurred Popeye to devote himself to spinach; no misguided rules of eating were implanted by the sailor strip. The story of the decimal point manages to recapitulate the very error that it means to highlight: a fake fact, but repeated so often (and with such sanctimony) that it takes on the sheen of truth.
In that sense, the story of the lost decimal point represents a special type of viral anecdote or urban legend, one that finds its willing hosts among the doubters, not the credulous. It’s a rumor passed around by skeptics — a myth about myth-busting. Like other Russian dolls of distorted facts, it shows us that, sometimes, the harder that we try to be clear-headed, the deeper we are drawn into the fog.
Can-1b
No one knows this lesson better than Mike Sutton. He must be the world’s leading meta-skeptic: a 56-ye
continue: http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/who-will-debunk-the-debunkers/
|
RMN is an RA production.
Articles In This Thread
- Debunking The Debunkers: The Truth About The Half-Life Of Facts, Especially Established Facts...
Watchman -- Wednesday, 4-May-2016 22:30:15
- Shirley Temple: You've Gotta Eat Your Spinach Baby, From Poor Little Rich Girl (1936)
NaturalWisdom -- Thursday, 5-May-2016 00:51:24
|
The only pay your RMN moderators receive comes from ads.
If you're using an ad blocker, please consider putting RMN in your ad blocker's whitelist.
Serving Truth and Freedom
Worldwide since 1996
Politically Incorrect News
Stranger than Fiction
Usually True!
Click Widget or Click Here to contribute.

^
AGENTS WEBPAGES
Provided free to RMN Agents
^
AGENTS WEBPAGES
Provided free to RMN Agents
|