Exactly, Neville! 

It's the "how" and the "how much" that matters.

Incorrect conclusions can easily be drawn to support either the pro or the con 
side of any topic if the biggest possible picture, based upon the best possible 
infomation which is presently available and understood, is not seen for what it 
is. 

Taking as many surrounding facts into account as possible and logging them for 
future reference helps to develop the big picture experience and that is 
precisely why Lists like this one provide so much wisdom. When a large number 
of people are acting and reporting in a similar way, their collective 
experiences start to add up to something much bigger than a single personal 
effert, due to duplication of results.

When this type of synergistic collective experimenting/reporting is being 
carried out, anecdotal evidence can be very meaningful as each successive 
anecdote helps to confirm another similar one or chip away at some of the 
credibility of a dissimilar one, until the "statue", if you will, of evidence 
begins to take on a definite form of its own as it's shaped by a multitude of 
experimenters/artists who are all contributing to the final, or at least, 
fairly recognizable, piece of work/art. 

So, keep the anecdotes coming! They are worth their weight in silver, if not 
gold!

Peter

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Neville Munn 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2010 9:59 PM
  Subject: RE: CS>Anecdotal Evidence and CS


  Which is why a million questions need be asked so it can be logged and put up 
against another case which may come to light in the future, then comparisons 
can be made and a more accurate assessment may ensue.  It's more a matter of 
*how much* information will/can be willingly/readily given or extracted from 
the individual and what conclusions, if any, can be drawn based on that 
information.
    
  Most correlate 'CS' with argyria, but that 'CS' usually constitutes 
*anything* that contains silver, or even the smell of silver?  That alone 
prompts a thousand questions...Fairly difficult to determine with a degree of 
accuracy one way or tuther I would think from information available on the net 
today...Questions, questions, questions...Answers not entirely convincing or 
praps even trustworthy...supposition, inuendo, trickery, and some of course are 
outright lies...doesn't make an assessment any easier for or against!  So, best 
everyone keeps plugging away on their own I spose using themselves as 'case 
studies', guinea pigs, or lab rats...each convincing themselves and/or making 
their own deliberations along the way.
   
  N.
   

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Date: Tue, 26 Jan 2010 17:04:29 -0800
  From: [email protected]
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: CS>Anecdotal Evidence and CS


        I'm always reluctant to accept anecdotal evidence at face value. 



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