@moodyrick8503

Critical thinking, skepticism & a good understanding of fallacies, should be
taught & valued in our education system as much as math & language.

@spawncity

When youre trying to go to sleep to this and its making so much sense that you can't fall asleep. Keep up the amazing work my friend

@jakehauhnar8462

Playing ads for a video to fall asleep to is diabolical

@atheist.archive

This is actually incredible. All chaptered out and everything. Bravo. πŸ˜’πŸ‘

@donprincoify

I wish I had this when I was in high school. Thanks for keeping my brain young.

@dOniellewithanO

I swear adults in the USA need to be rounded up and taught these.

@PopeSaltyI

In "Appeal to Consequences" (1:24:40), the following example is given "A person argues against artificial intelligence, not because of its technical flaws, but because they fear its impact on jobs." This example ignores the fact that, in this case, the argument is not about the existence of AI, but rather the ethics of it. The consequences are the entire point. Just wanted to point out that one mistake in an otherwise very good video.

@DiabolikalFollikles

How in the cornbread hell can anyone with higher order thinking skills fall asleep to this? I’m over here writing notes in my journal…*and* annotating [them]. This is some good, good sht. πŸ“

@annabelladebonnay8320

This video  should   be compulsary viewing in all schools.  Excellente.  !!!!!   ❀

@mtbbaconbro5236

I cant even sleep to these bc they remind me so much of the the government rn and now im just mad.

@Stories_for_sleep-TH

✨ Amazing! The historical story is told in a gentle, slow voice, as if taking the mind into the flow of time. Each detail is just enough to stimulate the imagination, while gently lulling the mind to sleep peacefully. It sounds like you are floating in a river of memories - peaceful, deep and enchanting. Thank you to the video maker for turning history into a magical and poetic sleeping pill! πŸ’€πŸ“œπŸŒ™

@imgoldifilms

This is some real information , it made me look at life so different. Thanks for sharing this ❀

@SootheParadox

Logical Fallacies to Fall Asleep, great, love it.

@17goffshas

1) Appeal to Probability: refers to using improper probability functions to determine the likelihood of an event. Such as a mother whose two babies both were lost, and using the improbability of both occurring to one mother to jail that mother for their newfound absence. When it would be more likely that the mother carried a genetic flaw that led to both occurrences. The court case relied on badly figured probabilities, not considering that probabilities do not operate in a vacuum.

2) Presentism Fallacy: glad you included it and explained it well, I tended to call it the "Modern Man Fallacy." Didn't know that was a recognized fallacy.

@SleepyHistorys

Such calming vibes... I could listen to this all day. πŸ’«

@EspenFrafalne

Just what society needs at this time..! Thanks for the great work πŸ‘

@jtstar10

Excellent presentation with perfect voice and delivery!!πŸ˜ŽπŸ‘πŸ‘

@markengle2199

Thanks. I couldn’t sleep and this helped

@Raxapheon

The fallacy's fallacy: citing a fallacy just to get the upper hand

@kmunchartedmysteries

18:10 - False dilemma is everywhere! People love to simplify complex issues into black and white, but life isn’t that simple. This part really made me think!