Opinions like this are dangerous for intelligent people. I was falsely diagnosed by my doctors for 10 years who were gun-ho on not "over testing". They told me my symptoms were just IBS and there was no need for additional testing. I had to find a doctor who would do more tests and immediately they found cancer in my intestines, a softball-sized tumor in my liver, and multiple other tumors. Denying intelligent people knowledge is a mistake; we just also need the information need to process the data provided. But I do agree there is a section of patients who will have trouble using the information they might receive.
lawlorino|6 years ago
> Opinions like this are dangerous for intelligent people.
I also want to add this was quite rude and conceited.
remmargorp64|6 years ago
Personally, I didn't interpret the poster's opinion as rude or conceited. This is hacker news. It attracts a demographic of intelligent people who are used to seeing the world without blinders on. It makes sense to me that someone who identifies as a "hacker" would be offended by the idea of withholding information.
shalmanese|6 years ago
The truth is, when we do a careful autopsy of old people who died of non-cancer diseases, we usually find a ton of hidden tumors that have just quietly been lying dormant, not really harming them. In those cases, ignorance is bliss because doing anything to remove the tumors only could have increased their risk of death given that the tumors didn't kill them.
We don't know what bucket of people any one person is in, we can only look at overall statistics.