The Chicago bureau chief being off by 6% in a tweet is an example of "exceedingly, horrendously, tragically bad?" The story clearly says "because of Covid." The tweet's claim is "...the statistic is misrepresented. The…
Agreed, this example goes against your narrative. That's a huge claim to make without any evidence at all, interesting opinion I guess.
Do you have examples of stories where the facts were "exceedingly, horrendously, tragically bad" and were published without any retraction?
The NYT has an agenda to under-report the number of COVID infections?
They are definitely not "it's [sic] most prestigious" market, but they inspire admiration among other devs
What? Do you mean SSRIs specifically? Or are you including SNRIs, α2 blockers, MAO inhibitors etc? Do you have any evidence to support this or just anecdotes?
The parent comment draws an important difference between the use of psychedelic therapy and, say, ECT. I support this research but "Big Psychiatry just wants the cash!" is a reddit-level of nuance we can do without…
This is too broad a statement to support with evidence. This study was specifically about treatment-resistant chronic depression and the measured effects on the brain.
What's being described in the study is not self-reflection but serotonergic psychedelics' effects on the 5-HT2A receptors in the brain. For example, escitalopram (Lexapro) may help with self-reflection as well but this…
The Chicago bureau chief being off by 6% in a tweet is an example of "exceedingly, horrendously, tragically bad?" The story clearly says "because of Covid." The tweet's claim is "...the statistic is misrepresented. The…
Agreed, this example goes against your narrative. That's a huge claim to make without any evidence at all, interesting opinion I guess.
Do you have examples of stories where the facts were "exceedingly, horrendously, tragically bad" and were published without any retraction?
The NYT has an agenda to under-report the number of COVID infections?
They are definitely not "it's [sic] most prestigious" market, but they inspire admiration among other devs
What? Do you mean SSRIs specifically? Or are you including SNRIs, α2 blockers, MAO inhibitors etc? Do you have any evidence to support this or just anecdotes?
The parent comment draws an important difference between the use of psychedelic therapy and, say, ECT. I support this research but "Big Psychiatry just wants the cash!" is a reddit-level of nuance we can do without…
This is too broad a statement to support with evidence. This study was specifically about treatment-resistant chronic depression and the measured effects on the brain.
What's being described in the study is not self-reflection but serotonergic psychedelics' effects on the 5-HT2A receptors in the brain. For example, escitalopram (Lexapro) may help with self-reflection as well but this…