Comment by wat10000 6 hours ago Burden of proof is on the one making the claim. Status quo has nothing to do with it. 5 comments wat10000 Reply operatingthetan 6 hours ago You should revisit the burden of proof then. Status quo is most certainly an important part.Regardless, their claim was "OpenClaw is flawed, but the convenience is an order of magnitude higher than anything else."And they attempted to shift the burden when I asked for substantiation. wat10000 6 hours ago Status quo influences how good your proof has to be (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) but not who needs to bring it. operatingthetan 5 hours ago Think more deeply about this. https://lastedenblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/professor-jame... 2 replies →
operatingthetan 6 hours ago You should revisit the burden of proof then. Status quo is most certainly an important part.Regardless, their claim was "OpenClaw is flawed, but the convenience is an order of magnitude higher than anything else."And they attempted to shift the burden when I asked for substantiation. wat10000 6 hours ago Status quo influences how good your proof has to be (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) but not who needs to bring it. operatingthetan 5 hours ago Think more deeply about this. https://lastedenblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/professor-jame... 2 replies →
wat10000 6 hours ago Status quo influences how good your proof has to be (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) but not who needs to bring it. operatingthetan 5 hours ago Think more deeply about this. https://lastedenblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/professor-jame... 2 replies →
operatingthetan 5 hours ago Think more deeply about this. https://lastedenblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/professor-jame... 2 replies →
You should revisit the burden of proof then. Status quo is most certainly an important part.
Regardless, their claim was "OpenClaw is flawed, but the convenience is an order of magnitude higher than anything else."
And they attempted to shift the burden when I asked for substantiation.
Status quo influences how good your proof has to be (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) but not who needs to bring it.
Think more deeply about this. https://lastedenblog.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/professor-jame...
2 replies →