this is a fallacy, though the conclusion may of course be true
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people are more likely to try things when they perceive they'll find them less harmful and more beneficial, in not necessarily legible ways
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if you're on the fence about whether to try a given thing, you are not typical of the population of those who have tried it
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you are not typical of this population even if you look at the subpopulation where all measurable characteristics are the same as yours
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(when it is possible to persist or to give up partway through, you are even less typical of the population that chooses to persist)
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hmm. i guess the point as stated here also applies to not trying things instead of trying things
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anyway, even if trying things is good, i think stating arguments against it is good because explicit arguments displace vague discomfort
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explicit arguments can be applied selectively where they are the most correct. vague discomfort cannot be applied selectively
End of conversation
New conversation -
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selection bias
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