• @Peaty
    link
    18 months ago

    OP has no idea who NBER was so “they” would be the government.

    Do context clues exist in your first language?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      18 months ago

      OP has no idea who NBER was

      And what evidence has led you to believe that… Oh yeah, another assumption!

      Do context clues exist in your first language?

      Lol, do logical fallacies exist in your first language?

      • @Peaty
        link
        18 months ago

        Assumptions are not logical fallacies. Deriving info from context is not either.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          18 months ago

          The logical fallacies happened when you utilized your assumptions to validate your claim, not when you made an assumption.

          • @Peaty
            link
            18 months ago

            That isn’t a fallacy either. If they knew about the NBER or not “they” did not change the definition. The definition they thought was correct is an oversimplification and was not correct.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              18 months ago

              The continuum fallacy (also known as the fallacy of the beard,[9][10] line-drawing fallacy, or decision-point fallacy[11]) is an informal fallacy related to the sorites paradox. Both fallacies cause one to erroneously reject a vague claim simply because it is not as precise as one would like it to be. Vagueness alone does not necessarily imply invalidity. The fallacy is the argument that two states or conditions cannot be considered distinct (or do not exist at all) because between them there exists a continuum of states.