On May 7, 2009, at 12:41 PM, Nick Arnett wrote:

On Thu, May 7, 2009 at 9:51 AM, Bruce Bostwick <[email protected] > wrote:
On May 6, 2009, at 5:57 PM, William Goodall wrote:

Anti-evolutionist Don McLeroy, a dentist and chair of the Texas State Board of Education, testified at Friday's hearing: "I disagree with these experts. Someone has got to stand up to experts."

Especially people who .. you know .. lack any kind of scientific expertise at all?

I guess it helps if you go in already knowing what you believe and determined not to let objective reality get in the way ..

I think this sort of thing has been unfortunately encouraged by rules and policies like the Fairness Doctrine, which was based on the well-intentioned, but seriously flawed, idea that every argument automatically has a legitimate counter-argument. Thus we get all sorts of "experts" to offer "the other viewpoint" on all sorts of things. On issues where there are many legitimate opinions, this kind of thinking dilutes them to just two. Big media has encouraged this sort of non-thinking.

Nick

And one other unintended consequence of the Fairness Doctrine is that the "expert" for the "other viewpoint" is often given the illusion of a level of legitimacy that he/she would never have had without that national media exposure, which can in turn make it far more difficult to counter that argument than it really should be from the actual validity of the argument itself.

"Of all forms of caution, caution in love is perhaps the most fatal to true happiness." -- Bertrand Russell


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