> That's pointless, let's just go to the heart of the issue here. You, for some reason, are special, and smarter than all of us idiots that listened to our doctor when they said "get the covid vaccine."
Thank you for providing a near perfect example of ad hominem. You avoid answering the straightforward question that is in no way "pointless" and instead attack me as a person. I'll take that as a telling win, as will anyone else reading this.
> So, when I answer your question as to why we don't get the Yellow Fever vaccine, "because doctors don't recommend it, but doctors do recommend getting the COVID vaccine," tell us why you are right, and why they are wrong to say we should get the COVID vaccine.
Thank you for providing a near perfect example of the appeal to authority fallacy. Firstly, not all doctors nor medical professionals, epidemiologists etc do recommend getting the vaccine for all individuals.
> tell us why you are right
Secondly, I have.
> You don't actually know for sure whether or not you're susceptible to a bad COVID infection, unless, again, you know something the rest of the world doesn't, which, you don't. So, the statistics indicate that you, like most people, should just get a COVID vaccine.
This is faulty reasoning. The fact is that statistically I am unlikely to be the kind of person with a comorbidity, apparent or not, known or not. Hence, the risk as can be assessed is small. Unknowns unknowns, to quote Donald Rumsfeld for a moment, are not a useful part of a risk assessment. I guess we'll find you hiding in your home made nuclear bunker waiting for the alien invasion? No, didn't think so.
> If the term "social responsibility" makes you hear the soviet national anthem in your head, I'm very curious how you feel about littering, playing loud music in public, and opting to hold in a pee until you get to a public bathroom.
None of those examples involve a medical procedure, an invasive one at that. A better example would be the forced abortions and impregnations that the three best known types of nasty socialists, the Soviets, the Maoists and the Nazis, imposed on some people. They would call that "social responsibility" too.
> And if you think everyone that uses words like "lol" is a teenager, I'm really curious how you are at parties lmao
People who would say "lol" at a party are people I'd like to avoid so it's not a concern of mine. People who are unable to handle their cognitive dissonance in the face of information that counters their ill informed, ill thought out notions, who let emotion go to their head and respond irrationally, they certainly do resemble teenagers in many ways.
> Thank you for providing a near perfect example of the appeal to authority fallacy.
Appeal to authority is only a rhetorically valid challenge if the authority is wrong. It's not. And there's not one single authority I'm appealing to here: it's all the people on earth most qualified to say whether or not people should get vaccinations. If "appeal to authority" means "you can't ever ask qualified people what to do in a situation they're qualified to discuss, that's appeal to authority!" then I really don't know how you can have any sort of rational basis for existence at all. You can't trust your doctor, you can't trust your car mechanic, you can't trust a camera review website, you can't trust a chef to make you good food, I mean, what on earth kind of intellectual basis for existence is that? Absurdity.
> Firstly, not all doctors nor medical professionals, epidemiologists etc do recommend getting the vaccine for all individuals.
Almost all do for almost all people. I never tried to argue that everyone should get a covid vaccine, just that those who doctors recommend should, should. Very simple. The cases where someone shouldn't are rare and well documented. Your argument that the young and healthy shouldn't doesn't apply here. It's moot to bring it up at all, and it's bad rhetoric.
> This is faulty reasoning. The fact is that statistically I am unlikely to be the kind of person with a comorbidity, apparent or not, known or not. Hence, the risk as can be assessed is small. Unknowns unknowns, to quote Donald Rumsfeld for a moment, are not a useful part of a risk assessment. I guess we'll find you hiding in your home made nuclear bunker waiting for the alien invasion? No, didn't think so.
The chance of you having a negative side effect from a covid vaccine that's worse than a bad covid infection, is lower than the chance of you having a really bad covid infection. So, why don't you get the vaccine? Why do you decide that you're more worried about a side effect from a covid vaccine, than you are about a bad covid infection? The statistics don't hold for your reasoning, it's you engaging in faulty reasoning. This on top of the social benefit upsides of slowing the spread of COVID, reducing hospitalization, etc.
> A better example would be the forced abortions and impregnations that the three best known types of nasty socialists, the Soviets, the Maoists and the Nazis,
As far as I know nobody's forcing anybody to get covid vaccinations. I'm arguing that you should do so, not be forced to. My argument is more medically and ethically sound, that's all. So if you're a rational person with good ethics, you should get vaccinated. That should be enough, there's no reason to involve State violence to enforce it. Also, since when are the nazis socialists lmao. Wait... because the German translates to "national socialism?" I've never actually encountered someone that took the nazis at such face value lol. Do you also believe the Democratic People's Republic of North Korea is a democratic republic? In any point it doesn't really matter to me what the nazis called social responsibility, their idea of society is ethically horrifying, so we need not consider their opinions on the concept of social responsibility.
> People who would say "lol" at a party are people I'd like to avoid so it's not a concern of mine.
That's a self report for being boring at parties fam
> People who are unable to handle their cognitive dissonance in the face of information that counters their ill informed, ill thought out notions, who let emotion go to their head and respond irrationally, they certainly do resemble teenagers in many ways.
Yet you're the one that believes, in the face of overwhelming evidence, that they shouldn't get a covid vaccine.
My earlier accusation that you must be smarter isn't an ad hominem - your claim is extraordinary and thus requires extraordinary evidence, and also requires a better explanation. Heliocentric theory isn't just bad because the evidence doesn't back it, it also requires a whole stack of bad explanations to justify it, inventing magic beings to carry around globes of light to explain what we observe in the sky. Your idea, that almost all doctors on earth are telling almost all people on earth to get a COVID vaccine are either wrong or lying, requires an extraordinary explanation. Either a massive failure in the scientific process in thousands of research centers across the globe - including in countries that are actively engaged in propaganda wars with eachother and normally very motivated to counter eachother!. Or, conspiracy, which, you know, if you want to be on the side of the flat earthers, please by all means, but at least be aware of the hilarious irony of doing so and then turning around and accusing those of us that got vaccinated as engaging in "cognitive dissonance."
You haven't provided a good argument to not get vaccinated. You dropped a lot of links around, but none of them counter the core argument: most people, as recommended by their doctors, should get a COVID vaccine.
> as will anyone else reading this.
lol, nobody is reading this, days old and deeply buried thread. Just me and you here.
> Appeal to authority is only a rhetorically valid challenge if the authority is wrong.…
That whole paragraph is erroneous from the start.
The truth or falsity of a statement that appeals to authority is not what make it fallacious - nor would it for any logical fallacy. As the name hints at, it is the logic which is in question, the reasoning, the form, not the truth. "2 + 2 = 4 because n + 2 = 4" is fallacious yet the statement "2 + 2 = 4" is correct. Appeal to authority is a fallacy of relevance - like ad hominem - because it does not address the reasoning. 2 + 2 = 4 isn't true because my maths teacher says it's true, and to say it is because my maths teacher is a maths teacher or has a degree in maths is irrelevant to why 2 + 2 = 4 is correct (or not).
Schoolboy error.
> And there's not one single authority I'm appealing to here: it's all the people on earth most qualified to say whether or not people should get vaccinations.
Except for notable exceptions:
“No. Thinking that everyone must be vaccinated is as scientifically flawed as thinking that nobody should. COVID vaccines are important for older high-risk people, and their care-takers. Those with prior natural infection do not need it. Nor children.” - Martin Kulldorff, until recently he was professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. I'll let Wikipedia continue:
> He is a member of the US Food and Drug Administration's Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee and a former member of the Vaccine Safety Subgroup of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Or we can look at his fellow signatory to the Great Barrington Declaration, Sunetra Gupta:
“What we’ve seen is that in normal, healthy people, who are not elderly or frail or don’t have comorbidities, this virus is not something to worry about no more than how we worry about flu,”
“most of us don’t need to worry about coronavirus,”
and unquoted but attributed[1]: “Gupta said that she thinks the coronavirus pandemic will end naturally and will become part of our lives just like influenza.”
Sunetra Gupta is an infectious disease epidemiologist and a professor of theoretical epidemiology at the Department of Zoology, University of Oxford.
So you're stuck with your appeal to authority, and you've multiplied it with argumentum ad populum.
> Your argument that the young and healthy shouldn't doesn't apply here. It's moot to bring it up at all, and it's bad rhetoric.
I don't think you understand what moot means, and as for bad rhetoric, "lol".
Case in point:
> The chance of you having a negative side effect from a covid vaccine that's worse than a bad covid infection, is lower than the chance of you having a really bad covid infection.
Now that's moot.
> So, why don't you get the vaccine?
Because I'm not at risk. (See, it was moot)
> This on top of the social benefit upsides of slowing the spread of COVID, reducing hospitalization, etc.
a) Thanks again, Mao
b) Isolating when symptomatic slows the spread more effectively
c) It reduces hospitalisation for those at risk
> As far as I know nobody's forcing anybody to get covid vaccinations.
Let's look at the first result I got for "Biden vaccine mandate" from NBC News[2] to see your wilful ignorance:
*Biden announces sweeping vaccine mandates affecting millions of workers*
> My argument is more medically and ethically sound, that's all.
On that[3]:
> The measles vaccine provided sterilizing immunity in most people.
> That's not the case with these vaccines.
> How can mandates be moral in this case? With a non-sterilizing product, it's nobody's business except mine if I want to get vacced or not.
>
> Sunetra Gupta @SunetraGupta
> Jan 28, 2022
> Replying to @neorevolt
> Exactly
Well well. Not so moral, in the eyes of a world renowned expert in vaccines.
Your argument is based on false premises and a lack of basic knowledge. It is littered with errors of reasoning and fact which makes it in no way ethically sound. Much like moot and fallacy, I doubt you know what sound means in the context of argument.
> Also, since when are the nazis socialists lmao. Wait... because the German translates to "national socialism?"
Yes, I based it entirely on the name.I wouldn't, for instance, have bothered to know basic facts about the most important event of the 20th century before coming to that conclusion, just the name. Why didn't they call themselves international socialists? I wonder. Why are they against individual liberty? I can't fathom. Why does the 25 point plan read like a socialist manifesto. Who knows?
Jesus wept.
> My earlier accusation that you must be smarter isn't an ad hominem - your claim is extraordinary
It's ordinary, medical orthodoxy, which is why mandates and pushing for not at risk populations to vaccinate is contentious.
> Your idea, that almost all doctors on earth are telling almost all people on earth to get a COVID vaccine are either wrong or lying, requires an extraordinary explanation.
I haven't ever claimed such a thing, while you are making a claim on behalf of "all doctors on earth" that they haven't made either. The more correct claim is that doctors in top government positions are telling people to get a COVID vaccine. Others contradict them (I can give you a long list).
> Either a massive failure in the scientific process in thousands of research centers across the globe
From [4]:
> Randomized trials show all-cause mortality reduction from the AZ/J&J/S adenovirus-vector vaccines (RR=0.37, 95%CI:0.19-0.70) but not from the Pfizer/Moderna mRNA vaccines (RR=1.03, 95%CI 0.63-1.71). By Dr. @StabellBenn et al.
And from Stabell-Benn's interview with Unherd[5]:
> It is also a bit of a Pandora’s box, I think, for health authorities, because if they start acknowledging these effects there is also the huge problem of potential negative non-specific effects that have actually been brought to the attention of the WHO already 20 years ago, but they haven’t really responded with the investigations. So you can see the potential backlash for the WHO, for vaccination programmes, if it actually comes out that some vaccines have carried these negative non-specific effects.
> So I’ve been in this business for many years and I know that there are powers out there who aren’t interested in really digging into these findings. And again, it also has implications for the way we test vaccines, so you can see it is complicated stuff also for companies, for regulators, if we need to design vaccine phase 3 trials which do not only study the specific disease but also study all-cause mortality and morbidity.
If the mRNA vaccines aren't as effective then the risk/benefit ratio changes, so I should take something like the AZ vaccine, but that was withdrawn in several countries as the risks outweighed the benefits, but I should still get the vaccine, right?
You might also note this[6], in the BMJ, November 2021:
> A regional director who was employed at the research organisation Ventavia Research Group has told The BMJ that the company [Pfizer] falsified data, unblinded patients, employed inadequately trained vaccinators, and was slow to follow up on adverse events reported in Pfizer’s pivotal phase III trial. Staff who conducted quality control checks were overwhelmed by the volume of problems they were finding. After repeatedly notifying Ventavia of these problems, the regional director, Brook Jackson (video 1), emailed a complaint to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Ventavia fired her later the same day. Jackson has provided The BMJ with dozens of internal company documents, photos, audio recordings, and emails.
That's a massive failure - and possible conspiracy - in some research centers across the globe. Isn't funny how that company's claims of vaccine efficacy and safety are now being questioned? What's really funny (not haha) is how they weren't questioned more before, but we have the Twitter Files to answer that conundrum.
> if you want to be on the side of the flat earthers,
Kulldorf, Gupta and Stabell-Benn are flat earthers? Interesting.
> please by all means, but at least be aware of the hilarious irony of doing so and then turning around and accusing those of us that got vaccinated as engaging in "cognitive dissonance."
And there we have your go-to, a straw man. I have written repeatedly that it is up to people to decide whether they get the vaccine, and that they should base it on their situation i.e. risk/benefit and good conscience. I've not accused anyone of cognitive dissonance for getting vaccinated. I have, however, observed cognitive dissonance in you, and we're about to see some more:
> You haven't provided a good argument to not get vaccinated.
Uh huh.
> You dropped a lot of links around,
Right.
> but none of them counter the core argument
Didn't read them, I see. Finally:
> > as will anyone else reading this.
> lol, nobody is reading this, days old and deeply buried thread. Just me and you here.
I often read entire threads on HN. Perhaps this isn't the place for you, it requires a higher standard of thought, which itself requires concentration.
> 2 + 2 = 4 isn't true because my maths teacher says it's true, and to say it is because my maths teacher is a maths teacher or has a degree in maths is irrelevant to why 2 + 2 = 4 is correct (or not).
...right, but the math teacher is less likely to teach you bad math, than, say, an antivaxxer on hackernews. And the great thing is, the greater medical authority is, as I said, not one person, but tens of thousands of people among thousands of institutions in hundreds of countries. I'm not "appealing to authority," I'm appealing to basic reasoning at this point.
> US Food and Drug Administration's Drug Safety and Risk Management Advisory Committee and a former member of the Vaccine Safety Subgroup of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
You immediately begin appealing to authority, lol.
> Thanks again, Mao
If you genuinely believe doing things for the betterment of the world is communism, your ethical system, and understanding of history, is bonkers. But, we already knew that, because you continue to claim the nazis were socialists. No, they were not.
> Isolating when symptomatic slows the spread more effectively
...except you can be asymptomatic infectious.
> It reduces hospitalisation for those at risk
Which, again, roll the dice on that. If you believe you are at higher chance of bad vaccine side effect than bad covid infection, you're simply wrong.
> Biden announces sweeping vaccine mandates affecting millions of workers
I fail to see any similarity between this and nazis sterilizing jews at gunpoint. Wait a second... are you saying that under capitalism, all labor is extracted through force of violence, because one will be homeless and starve if one doesn't work, and thus anything that affects one's ability to do employment is the same as sentencing them to homelessness and starvation, and in the usa, no healthcare? Woah that's weird, I hear the soviet national anthem.
You're talking about this gupta person again, let's see how much better they are at virology than the entire world of experts they're disagreeing with. Ah, in May of 2020, they said
> "the epidemic has largely come and is on its way out in [the UK]. So, I think [the infection fatality rate] would be definitely less than one in a thousand, and probably closer to one in ten thousand."
Weird, turns out it's actually about 2.3 in a thousand, or as high as 6.6 in a thousand. https://www.imperial.ac.uk/mrc-global-infectious-disease-ana... so they were either double off in their expert estimate... or far, far more off base. As for "it's on the way out," in May of 2020, hahaha, yeah, some fantastic, smarter-than-everyone-else expert you've got there.
Your champion of the antivax cause is not a very popular person, which isn't itself an indictment if they had good science, but... they don't. Their science has been off every single time. Could it be that the greater scientific community disagrees with Gupta because... Gupta is wrong?
> but we have the Twitter Files to answer that conundrum.
oh ffs, if you want to see hunter biden's dick you can just google it
> Kulldorf, Gupta and Stabell-Benn are flat earthers? Interesting.
No but they all have these super weird ties to the American Institute for Economic Research, libertarian think tank famous denying climate change as a major risk, or this whizz bang of an article justifying sweat shop labor https://doi.org/10.1007/s12122-006-1006-z fun group of folks! But definitely these guys are more trustworthy than the greater scientific community that basically roundly disagrees with them.
Their brainchild, that Barrington Declaration, is weird to bring up, arguing for "protecting vulnerable groups" against infection, while the signatories get on TV and argue against any sort of mandate doing just that. No wonder they were accused of being politically motivated, they're constantly contradicting themselves. They also just say wrong things - Remember when Kulldorff argued that influenza was deadlier than COVID, despite it only killing one kid that year? Against COVID's 1k?
You basically are just restating the various viewpoints of Barrington signatories, but those have all been probed to destruction. Big fan of herd immunity? So was Sweden. The only upside is now we can at least point at them and say "well, it was said this strategy wouldn't work, and as we can see, it didn't." Here, you like wikipedia, they collated all the oppositions to Barrington https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Barrington_Declaration#C...
But this is a lot of words for what I think is really happening here: You're some form of conservative (maybe in your country you call it "libertarianism"), conservatives identify alongside covid denialism, so you do too. Your weird ideas about nazi political ideology and minimizing of their destructive actions by comparing it to, lol, vaccine mandates, illustrates this further. It never mattered what the science said, Your People said COVID is fake so you do too.
> Perhaps this isn't the place for you, it requires a higher standard of thought, which itself requires concentration.
> I'm not "appealing to authority," I'm appealing to basic reasoning at this point.
No, what you wrote in that paragraph is a further appeal to authority. It's what the cool kids call doubling down.
> You immediately begin appealing to authority, lol.
I'll explain what an appeal to authority is again for those who think they're too cool for school.
Most informal logical fallacies, when made, are fallacies of relevance as they do not address the logic of a statement or line of reasoning (else, necessarily, they are a failing of the logic, but mostly people make fallacies of relevance). As you pointed out, a maths teacher is less likely to teach bad mathematics but that isn't a valid or sound defence of any particular mathematical statement that a maths teacher makes. In order to defend a particular statement a mathematician has to do what maths teachers tell their students to do, show the working.
To state someone's expertise in an area is not a fallacy of relevance unless it sits in place of reasoning, otherwise it only provides context. If the reasoning is supplied then look at the reasoning.
From the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy[1]:
> 9. The ad verecundiam fallacy concerns appeals to authority or expertise. Fundamentally, the fallacy involves accepting as evidence for a proposition the pronouncement of someone who is taken to be an authority but is not really an authority. This can happen when non-experts parade as experts in fields in which they have no special competence—when, for example, celebrities endorse commercial products or social movements. Similarly, when there is controversy, and authorities are divided, it is an error to base one’s view on the authority of just some of them.
So, look at the information, weigh it up, and come to what you think is right. Try to avoid making glaringly obvious mistakes along the way, like the ones you have repeatedly made.
> Big fan of herd immunity? So was Sweden. The only upside is now we can at least point at them and say "well, it was said this strategy wouldn't work, and as we can see, it didn't."
Firstly, who isn't a fan of herd immunity? Do you even understand what it is?
Lastly, because what else needs to be said about Sweden after this, the data[2] shows that Sweden did not make a horrible mistake with their approach.
I can skip the rest, sifting out substantive argument from the conspiracy theories and ad hominem from that is surely a waste of time, but this caught my eye and gave me a good chuckle:
> But this is a lot of words for what I think is really happening here: You're some form of conservative (maybe in your country you call it "libertarianism"), conservatives identify alongside covid denialism, so you do too. Your weird ideas about nazi political ideology and minimizing of their destructive actions by comparing it to, lol, vaccine mandates, illustrates this further. It never mattered what the science said, Your People said COVID is fake so you do too.
Cognitive dissonance often requires that you create some evil character, an other, for those you disagree with. (ironically, something Soviets, Mao, and Nazis did). Suffering from it certainly hasn't helped with the accuracy of those guesses, I'd suggest you give it up as soon as possible.
Do try though to pick up a history book in future, at the very least.
Thank you for providing a near perfect example of ad hominem. You avoid answering the straightforward question that is in no way "pointless" and instead attack me as a person. I'll take that as a telling win, as will anyone else reading this.
> So, when I answer your question as to why we don't get the Yellow Fever vaccine, "because doctors don't recommend it, but doctors do recommend getting the COVID vaccine," tell us why you are right, and why they are wrong to say we should get the COVID vaccine.
Thank you for providing a near perfect example of the appeal to authority fallacy. Firstly, not all doctors nor medical professionals, epidemiologists etc do recommend getting the vaccine for all individuals.
> tell us why you are right
Secondly, I have.
> You don't actually know for sure whether or not you're susceptible to a bad COVID infection, unless, again, you know something the rest of the world doesn't, which, you don't. So, the statistics indicate that you, like most people, should just get a COVID vaccine.
This is faulty reasoning. The fact is that statistically I am unlikely to be the kind of person with a comorbidity, apparent or not, known or not. Hence, the risk as can be assessed is small. Unknowns unknowns, to quote Donald Rumsfeld for a moment, are not a useful part of a risk assessment. I guess we'll find you hiding in your home made nuclear bunker waiting for the alien invasion? No, didn't think so.
> If the term "social responsibility" makes you hear the soviet national anthem in your head, I'm very curious how you feel about littering, playing loud music in public, and opting to hold in a pee until you get to a public bathroom.
None of those examples involve a medical procedure, an invasive one at that. A better example would be the forced abortions and impregnations that the three best known types of nasty socialists, the Soviets, the Maoists and the Nazis, imposed on some people. They would call that "social responsibility" too.
> And if you think everyone that uses words like "lol" is a teenager, I'm really curious how you are at parties lmao
People who would say "lol" at a party are people I'd like to avoid so it's not a concern of mine. People who are unable to handle their cognitive dissonance in the face of information that counters their ill informed, ill thought out notions, who let emotion go to their head and respond irrationally, they certainly do resemble teenagers in many ways.