Okay, I’ll grant you that. It’s better to have a sufficiently strict filter that loses some useful information than a weaker filter which lets in garbage data. I would presume (or, at least, advise) that you make a particular effort to analyze data which you previously rejected but which remains widely discussed, however—an example from my own experience being Searle’s Chinese Room argument. Such items should be uncommon enough.
Okay, I’ll grant you that. It’s better to have a sufficiently strict filter that loses some useful information than a weaker filter which lets in garbage data. I would presume (or, at least, advise) that you make a particular effort to analyze data which you previously rejected but which remains widely discussed, however—an example from my own experience being Searle’s Chinese Room argument. Such items should be uncommon enough.
Agreed.