It's funny because the day before I read that comment I took a compliance course on ethics lmao.
I need to get it set up to work with multiple monitors. I haven't done that yet.
I'm aware, it was just the first English name and Spanish word I could think of that sounded similar for the example.
It's not surprising though considering reasoning is more of a social defense mechanism than anything.
No, people do not change their opinions based on new facts. It's important to not think of it like that because even non "indoctrinated" people we would all consider rational work like this. If you really want to change people's opinions on things, especially things that are important, you need to know how our brains work to get there and you shouldn't think less of people for not changing their minds immediately. Studies have shown our rationality is not a means of making decisions but a means of explaining our decisions. I highly recommend this Vsauce video on the topic. It's a great watch. https://youtu.be/_ArVh3Cj9rw
I first saw this video in early 2021 after spending a lot of time trying my best to show people they were wrong about COVID misinformation and election misinformation. It was a nice epilogue to that period of my life.
Sounds like a conflict of interest!
I'd be willing to consider it if there was an extreme homestead exemption.
Be brave and reach in.
My friend poops once a week. He claims he told his doctor and they said it's "on the edge of normal." It freaks me out though. I'd feel so bloated all the time.
Discord is on my phone 😭
No, not everyone who got long covid didn't take it seriously. But the people who were super spreaders or spread misinformation are certainly to blame.