Religion
In reply to the discussion: Can you give an example of an argument against religion that is ... [View all]Boojatta
(12,231 posts)In the late 1990s, the financial news included stories about dot com stock prices climbing steadily, with no apparent ceiling in sight. Such news had the detrimental effect of attracting speculative investors who kept the bubble growing. That growth created a hazard for the unwary, and the inevitable popping of the bubble had various detrimental effects. I trust that you don't on that basis conclude that news of high and rising dot com stock prices was false information.
If you don't like that example, then consider a quite different one. Eyewitness testimony can be quite valuable in establishing that some alleged events of the past actually occurred. Consider events that have led to post-traumatic stress disorder in most of the witnesses. Obviously the effects are detrimental, but just as obviously the eyewitnesses play an important role in establishing that the events actually occurred. If all eyewitnesses had been secretly hunted down and killed quickly and painlessly, then they wouldn't be alive to experience any detrimental effects, but the truth about the past might then be inaccessible to us.