Talk:Denialism
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Reference troubles and an underlying concern
As far as I can tell, Reference 1 is a newspaper book review of Reference 19, which is itself a journalist's account. Therefore, this article does not actually appear to cite any standard "psychological" definition of denialism (I have searched in vain for such a thing). While there are clearly an array of examples of organized prevarication and/or overeager, self-serving credulity that can be gathered under some generic heading, how do we proceed if "denialism" is effectively a pseudoscientific claim in itself, or just a popular meme, rather than a formally documented, diagnosable behavior or tendency? If one follows the chain of references far enough, most of the concept is ultimately based on blog posts by the brothers Hoofnagle (e.g., Refs 12 and 34), each of whom has impressive credentials —— just not in psychology or sociology, as might be expected. Alas, some of them even loop back to this Wikipedia article. Anekeia (talk) 01:39, 20 May 2021 (UTC)
"Deny, deny, deny" (defense strategy, politics)
Denial as a political and defense strategy is both IRL widespread and non properly covered on Wikipedia ifaik. Trump, but also Biden, Macron, Putin, all use it to spread doubt event when solid observables (=facts) are presented. The communicative, political, strategic side of denial deserves better coverage. Yug (talk) 🐲 11:26, 29 September 2021 (UTC) (Note: I keep this article creation in mind for myself as well but I'am already loaded with other articles)
- Yug This article has added a paragraph about the electoral conspiracy. The U.S. political movement driven by that conspiracy is described in Election denial movement in the United States. But it's a conspiracy that has a long history in global elections. rootsmusic (talk) 16:35, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
Genetically Modified Food controversies more genuinely controversial than presented here
User:Entropy1963 has made it clear by their last comment that they’re dragging this out because they’re personally offended. Per, WP:BLUDGEON and WP:SEALION, I don’t see any point in letting this keep going. If there’s unrelated disputes here that need to be addressed, please consider starting a new discussion Dronebogus (talk) 18:23, 23 June 2023 (UTC) |
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Food, agriculture related ecology and dietary health are more complex topics than the suggestion in this article that opposition to GMOs is denialist implies. Evidence of recent findings concerning the impact of varied diet on human microbiome diversity and consequent health outcomes implies an emergent and relevant area of knowledge. GMO cropping systems seem likely to come under this developing area of scientific scrutiny. Application of the precautionary principle until more is known can't impartially be described as 'denialist'. Some of this food impacted gut biome emerging research is linked here: [1] The article on Genetically Modified Food Controversies: <ref> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetically_modified_food_controversies <ref> seems more impartial. Therefore, this section of the denialism article doesn't appear to belong here, as if it remains, inclusion will reasonably be considered controversial until a wider consensus can be achieved. Unless a persuasive argument for keeping this section appears in response, I will attempt removal of this section. Copsewood (talk) 11:54, 2 January 2022 (UTC)
Respond to Hob Gadling: Do you know Aristarchus from Samos? If not serch Wikipedia to find out. He was claiming some two and a half thousand years ago that the earth goes around the sun but his argument was buried for millennia because there was “scientific consensus” (let alone “obvious” observation) that the sun goes around the earth. Do you know Clair Cameron Patterson? If not search Wikipedia to find out. By reading about him, you may also understand how perspectives which support huge organisations can achieve “scientific consensus” status. But you will accuse me again of “whataboutism” failing to understand that this page is about Denialism and not the safety of GMOs. On a planet where the human population skyrockets, GMOs will be the only solution to starvation, as was the case with the “Haber process” for the production of ammonia. But this page is about the derogatory and pejorative term Denialism and not about the safety of GMOs and my objection has nothing to do with GMOs. But if you could understand this, you would have also understood everything else I wrote but you didn’t, eventually blaming me for your inability to understand: “It is not our fault that you did not write clearly.” Entropy1963 (talk) 02:39, 22 June 2023 (UTC)
The juxtaposition of
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Current example
Herbalism / Traditional Chinese medicine / alternative medicine - Millennia of experimentation, sheafs of studies, but it gets shut down a lot by some Western (for example) cultures. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 172.58.19.167 (talk) 04:26, 24 May 2022 (UTC)
- This is not an example of denialism. If anything is scientifically verified & medically useful, it's just "medicine." — The Hand That Feeds You:Bite 15:11, 5 January 2023 (UTC)
- Herbalism is a mixture of genuine and bogus remedies. TCM is 90% junk that’s useless at best and dangerous at worst. Alternative medicine is a huge field that can range from genuinely helpful to outright deadly. “Millenia of experimentation” means nothing without the scientific method. There’s no connection between any of these to “denialism”. Dronebogus (talk) 13:15, 24 June 2023 (UTC)
- @Dronebogus, exactly, as @HandthatFeeds said, it's just "medicine", I really don't think it's useful enough (IMHO), in fact it has absolutely no connection, unless they have connection, and we don't know regard it (Probably it's gonna take a while to reach in some consensus, anyway, gonna wait) 177.105.90.20 (talk) 19:42, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
- From what I can gather from what you said, you basically meant that alternative medicine can be both helpful and dangerous, "de facto", it really depends on how it is used, if it is used on manners, Ok!, if it is not, it's totally dangerous for humankind, and with it, we see how good and not-good can walk each other, and how that's REALLY not good at all. 177.105.90.20 (talk) 19:54, 26 May 2024 (UTC)