@brimstoneSalad, as educated as you are about natural sciences, you appear to be extremely ignorant about social sciences and unable to realize when you are wrong. Like my father, you never concede that I might be right about something we disagree on.
You appear to misunderstand economics worse than most anarchists. I think most anarchists don't think that if the animal feed gets ore expensive, that necessarily means meat gets more expensive. I think most anarchists understand what is the labor theory of value and why it's wrong.
Now, as for the soft-science-versus-hard-science debate, I concede that you guessed correctly that the study of the Croatian toponyms is a soft science. I was wrong that the p-value of that k-r pattern in the Croatian river names is around 1/10'000. A better model that takes into account the collision entropy of different parts of the grammar of the Croatian language suggests that the probability of that k-r pattern occurring by chance is somewhere between 1/300 and 1/17. And you can make some hard-to-test but somewhat-plausible ad-hoc hypotheses as to why even 1/17 would be an underestimate ("
What if the collision entropy of the nouns of the Croatian language is significantly lower than the collision entropy of all the words in the Aspell word list for the Croatian language?"...). So, yeah, it's not entirely absurd to suggest that the study of the Croatian toponyms is describing coincidences. However, you were also claiming that the Havlik's Law is an example of a soft science. How can that be the case? How can the Havlik's Law possibly be describing a coincindence? I still think we can be reasonably certain that the Havlik's Law is true or at least that it is a very good approximation. As for the Grimm's Law, well, it's complicated. We don't have written records of Proto-Indo-European, so you can say something like "
How do we know that the exact opposite of the Grimm's Law isn't true? Maybe Armenian and Germanic haven't undergone massive sound-changes, but all the other branches of Indo-European have. (And almost all etymologies involving pre-historic borrowing to and from Proto-Germanic are wrong.)" without sounding like a Flat-Earther. But I wouldn't call it soft science because of that. Soft science means weak p-values, the p-value of the Grimm's Law would, if calculated, still be rather strong, it's just that there is an alternative interpretation of the evidence.
brimstoneSalad wrote:You have no idea.
OK, to me it seems like the Supreme Court is following the evidence in this case.
brimstoneSalad wrote:Those doing most of these self defense studies are pro-gun, they're not motivated to use reliable information, they're motivated to find large numbers.
And what do you think is happening in the Gary-Kleck-like studies?
Do you think that it's massive telescoping, that people are misremembering events that occurred eight years ago as if they occurred less than a year ago? Gary Kleck responds to that objection in his study by citing a study showing that people on average tend to remember events that occurred 14 months ago as if they occurred less than a year ago, not events that occurred 8 years ago. Now, you might argue that defensive gun uses are very stressful events so that telescoping would be much greater, but to say it would increase the number by 8 times... That's just a weird assertion, not to mention obviously ad-hoc.
Do you think that people are dreaming that they are using guns in self-defense and are mistaking those dreams for reality? That seems rather implausible to me. To me, it usually happens the other way around: I sometimes remember real events as if they were dreams. Is it different when you don't have a psychotic disorder?
brimstoneSalad wrote:That's an absurd number of discharges.
But what could possibly lead to such a giant error in the Gary-Kleck-like studies?
brimstoneSalad wrote:That gets us to at least 2,000 crimes defended against with a gun.
Start there.
The lower-bound number should, if anything, be around 100'000, as the NCVS statistics suggest that there are somewhere in the neighbourhood of 100'000 defensive gun uses per year, and it's not at all obvious how could NCVS statistics be an overestimate (but it's obvious how they could be a giant underestimate).
brimstoneSalad wrote:There you go misrepresenting my argument again.
I don't see how I straw-manned you, I am quite sure there is no evidence for what you are saying. I am quite sure you are using your intuition here, rather than looking at the evidence. OK, the article by Psychiatric Times may be slightly off, it's not exactly true that the mental health profile of mass shooters is similar to that of the general population, but what's true is that no mental illness is proved to make you more likely to be a mass shooter. Around 20% of mass shooters have a diagnozed mental illness, compared to around 8% of the general population. And there is certainly evidence that mass shooters are significantly more likely to have an anxiety disorder than the general population. But, like Shane Killian says, the mere suggestion that the relationship is causal seems ridiculous. Why doesn't the anxiety disorder make them lie on the floor in the foetal position, rather than grab a gun and start shooting strangers? Ironically, the mental illnesses that the media is usually blaming for mass shootings, such as paranoid schizophrenia, actually make you less likely to be a mass shooter.
And as a mentally ill person myself (I am suffering from a psychotic disorder), I find blaming mass shootings on mental illness rather insulting.
brimstoneSalad wrote:You have a month to do so.
And I hope that in the meantime you have familiarized yourself with the Garry Kleck's study.
brimstoneSalad wrote:The wording explicitly refers to the point of it being for allowing well regulated militias.
In the explanatory clause, not in the operative clause. It has no legislative effect. The 2nd Amendment consists of an explanatory clause and an operative clause. "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state" is an explanatory clause without a legislative effect, and "the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed" is an operative clause with a legislative effect.
brimstoneSalad wrote:When a would-be dictator is gathering forces to take over the country, you definitely have a few hours notice to unlock your guns and assemble your militia.
You think that arming the civilians helps against the tyrannical government? Well, I'd say it's complicated. I'd say it mostly does, but that there are some striking exceptions. What would have happened in Mao's China if more people had guns? The answer seems obvious to me: more sparrows would end up being killed, the invasion of the grasshoppers would be worse, and the famine would be worse. But why focus on that? The evidence that guns are useful for self-defense is overwhelming (countless Gary-Kleck-like studies), the evidence that guns protect against tyrannical governments is conflicting anecdotes.