The guardian reports on a sobering event in Washington DC.
US police have arrested a man wielding an assault rifle who entered a pizza restaurant that was the target of fake news reports it was operating a child abuse ring led by Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and her top campaign aide.
[...] The suspect entered the restaurant and pointed a gun at a restaurant employee, who fled and notified authorities, police said. The man then discharged the weapon inside the restaurant. There were no injuries.
[...] [Police] said the suspect during an interview with investigators revealed that he came to the establishment to "self-investigate" Pizzagate, the police statement said. Pizzagate is a baseless conspiracy, which falsely claims Clinton and her campaign chief John Podesta were running a child sex ring from the restaurant's backrooms.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 06 2016, @01:40PM
If you click on this [npr.org] you will find npr publishing a thinly veiled advertisement for a Coursera course on stats, taught by people who do not know the difference between significance and hypothesis testing. The potential damage due to that fake news is far worse than what one gunman can accomplish. As pointed out by one of the founders of modern stats, perpetuating this confusion is country destroying stuff:
The mainstream media needs to really stop publishing this kind of content if they want to be taken seriously about "fake news".
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 06 2016, @01:49PM
If you click on this you will find npr publishing a thinly veiled advertisement for a Coursera course on stats, taught by people who do not know the difference between significance and hypothesis testing.
Seems like you have an axe to grind with coursera or maybe the particular instructors on that course.
Either way, I find your criticism and especially your exaggeration completely disproportionate. If some innumerate gets slightly more numerate via a free online intro to stats course that's not going to cause guided missiles to miss their target.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 06 2016, @02:06PM
Not at all. I have never heard of the instructors and no experience with Coursera. I do have an "axe to grind" (correctly) with the people who teach others pseudo-statistics though, so much (of my own, and everyone else's) time has been wasted due to that. The threat is not only real, it has been here for decades and the damage is being done. Just because lots of other people are teaching pseudo-stats doesn't reduce the responsibility they have to stop. By the way, the idea "it doesn't matter" or is "someone else's fault" is an old one at the center of the mess:
Now, NPR can't be expected to have expertise in this, but they should be able to label advertisements as such. That is their part of the responsibility.
(Score: 1) by Scruffy Beard 2 on Tuesday December 06 2016, @05:44PM
If true, that means the practice of pushing a new edition every 3 years or so is worse than I thought.
Psychology and computing science may be an exception, but undergraduate courses (should) rarely change enough to justify a new edition every few years.
Of course I noted that my post 1991 Economics textbooks changed the definition of economics to imply that the free-market is the 'correct' economic system. They defined economics as:
It took me a while to figure out what was wrong with that statement. Our wants are not unlimited because having unlimited wants would require infinite mental capacity. Our wants are subject to the "law of diminishing returns" just like everything else.
While I am ranting about textbooks, there is another problem with frequent editions: They do not include erratas. I tried contacting the publisher of a computer repair text-book to asked them about their errata, They don't keep one, so I did not report the 7 errors my classmates and I found.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 07 2016, @12:07AM
They defined economics as:
The study of how (society) allocates their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants
It took me a while to figure out what was wrong with that statement. Our wants are not unlimited because having unlimited wants would require infinite mental capacity.
I'm not sure why you think that would be required. Certainly if you take "unlimited wants" to mean an infinitely large number of desires, it would take infinite mental capacity to enumerate them. But "unlimited" can mean more than one thing; instead of interpreting it as "an infinitely long list of desires" (which is obviously foolish, so I assume you're not doing it), we should probably assume it refers to the magnitude of each individual desire, i.e. we cannot state any finite quantity of resources, such that every "want" of (any member of) society can be fulfilled by that quantity of resources.
If you give everybody a Trek starship, somebody will want at least two (one to fly around in, one to blow up!). Give everyone a solar system, and somebody will want his name spelled out in supernovae. Give everyone a universe, and somebody wants a universe and a pony. Thinking of these examples certainly didn't take mental capacity proportional to the ludicrosity of the wants in question, because we're just manipulating symbols, and the symbol for the universe is no larger or harder to handle than the symbol for a starship.
Our wants are subject to the "law of diminishing returns" just like everything else.
I'm not sure you understand the law of diminishing returns; it applies specifically to a production process with multiple inputs, and says that when holding all but one input steady, and increasing that input, you will eventually get lower output per unit of that input. As an example, inputs could be workers (labor) and drill presses (capital) -- if you have 5 workers, and 10 drill presses, adding another worker might increase productivity 20%, but eventually (somewhere around 10-20 workers, depending on how much time is spent actually drilling widgets, vs. sharpening drills, handling raw and finished widgets, etc.), you stop seeing proportional increases in output. (Notably, the law does not say that at some point you will necessarily see a net decrease, or even no net increase -- just that the net increase will be less than proportional, and thus that the money spent on the last worker would have been more profitably put towards an additional drill press.)
I'm struggling to apply this to the idea of unlimited wants... All I can think of is that you're considering desire as one input to a process, whose output is... personal satisfaction (I guess?), and suggesting that increasing one's desires will eventually lead to decreased satisfaction per want. I'm not sure that model is particularly helpful or valid, but assuming it is, it still doesn't indicate that wants are limited. After all, if the other inputs to that process come from the "limited resources", and thus cannot be increased when it would be economically optimal to do so, your only option is to increase the one input that is not fixed, and accept the increase in output you get, even though that increase is less than proportional.
Alternatively, if you're considering wants to be the output of a production process (and I have no clue what resources you imagine as inputs), the law of diminishing returns only suggests that increasing one input out of balance with the rest will have decreasing per-unit yield in wants. But that doesn't imply decreasing total wants, and it doesn't apply at all if all inputs are increased together.
If you do understand the law properly, and didn't mean to apply it in either of those ways, I guess you'll have to explain what you did mean, because I'm stumped.
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Tuesday December 06 2016, @11:35PM
Or maybe they got suckered by a cleverly-written press release presented as "news." It happens when two generations of journalists have been taught that "reporting" means "grab something juicy off the AP Wire!!!"
Washington DC delenda est.