petersrin
petersrin t1_j1kx8kz wrote
Huh. Something good CAN come out of my home state
petersrin t1_iyborbp wrote
Reply to comment by gliderXC in ELI5: why is using "goto" considered to be a bad practice in programming? by Dacadey
"Not inherently evil" And in fact we still use something similar regularly for certain types of error handling.
petersrin t1_iw86n0v wrote
Reply to comment by allyouneedare6cats in TIFU by walking out of the bathroom naked in front of my 62 year old uncle by [deleted]
Because men on Reddit are awful. I saw one "theory" that it's because you're a bad person for even THINKING your uncle might "be into you." You had the audacity to be concerned about the quality of a man's character, and therefore you must be downvoted.
I'm sorry people are like this :(
petersrin t1_j2bhfoh wrote
Reply to comment by universallybanned in I don’t believe in the black hole. by Rabbitlooker
Common misconception in play here. If a scientist enters into a commonly agreed upon topic discussion, stating "I just don't believe in x", this is just a bias and is appropriately ignored.
"I have questions about the mechanics of x which makes me think perhaps there's a y that has all the features we've observed about x" is a perfectly fine viewpoint, rooted in scientific method.
"I wonder whether the data we've observed about x is actually just noise/biased/incomplete" is perfectly valid.
"I disgree with the commonly agreed narative for no reason other than my gut" should be ignored until some reasonable evidence as to why they disagree has been presented. If we had infinite manpower and resources, sure, leave no stone unturned! But since we don't, our current scientific model REQUIRES us to ignore such claims, or else we will be distracted from actual observations.
There are, as stated in other comments, some reasons to question black holes as we understand them today, but this was presented as "my gut just says they're not real." Which is fine. They can follow their gut. It's not gonna hurt anyone. But for others to defend that gut feeling as good enough scientific IS harmful and erodes our abilities to reason about and, in the worst case, DO, actual science.