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More Sloppy Reasoning about Survival
Author(s) -
Stephen E. Braude
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of scientific exploration
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0892-3310
DOI - 10.31275/20212251
Subject(s) - epistemology , psychology , subject (documents) , cognitive psychology , class (philosophy) , survival of the fittest , cognitive science , philosophy , computer science , biology , library science , evolutionary biology
In my writings on the evidence for postmortem survival. I’ve made no secret of the fact that I consider much of the literature on the subject to be very shabby, usually because the authors are empirically myopic or inferentially-challenged. That is, writers on survival notoriously ignore or treat very superficially relevant areas of research having their own extensive literatures (e.g., on dissociation, savantism, prodigies, gifted under-achievers, and language mastery), and too often they seem unable to formulate valid arguments. In Braude, 2003 I explored these deficiencies in great detail. Here, I’d like simply to comment on a particular class of confusions and a recent eruption of nonsequiturs.

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