Difference between revisions of Guide:How to doubt the reduced lens method
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This guide will show you how to doubt the reduced lens method, when you're coming across it for the first time. | |||
This guide will show you how to doubt | |||
{{clear}} | {{clear}} | ||
==Obviously, you should doubt this== | ==Obviously, you should doubt this== | ||
{{quote|This is total rubbish! If myopia was reversible everyone would know by now! This guy is trying to sell me something!|You, reading literally anything here for the first time}} | {{quote|This is total rubbish! If myopia was reversible everyone would know by now! This guy is trying to sell me something!|You, reading literally anything here for the first time}} | ||
When reading | When reading RLM content for the first time, if you seriously didn't doubt this stuff for the first time that would be pretty impressive. Mostly everybody has the same initial experience when they find the site for the first time. "It's all a scam." {{smaller|"I mean, it probably is, right?"}} | ||
There are, of course plenty of [[Wikipedia:snake oil|snake oil]] salespeople on the internet. At a quick glance, | There are, of course plenty of [[Wikipedia:snake oil|snake oil]] salespeople on the internet. At a quick glance, the reduced lens method shouldn't seem all that different. | ||
==Reasons to reconsider extreme doubt== | ==Reasons to reconsider extreme doubt== | ||
Here's a few reasons you should, maybe reconsider whether any of this stuff is real instead of dismissing it without thinking: | Here's a few reasons you should, maybe reconsider whether any of this stuff is real instead of dismissing it without thinking: | ||
*[https://endmyopia.org/success/ | *[https://endmyopia.org/success/ There are plenty of success stories] | ||
*[[ | *[[Red:EDIT|This entire wiki was built]] from the ground up by an army of volunteers, for free. There is significant interest | ||
*There are plenty of [[Clinical_Studies|clinical studies (list)]] that indicate the axial length of the eyeball is not fixed and can change over time. We didn't write these studies, we're just applying their lessons. | *There are plenty of [[Clinical_Studies|clinical studies (list)]] that indicate the axial length of the eyeball is not fixed and can change over time. We didn't write these studies, we're just applying their lessons. | ||
We encourage you to be open-minded and consider all of the options available to you, instead of just ours. We're all about engaging those critical thinking skills. If you can understand vision biology yourself, then you are in a better position to decide what is and isn't likely to fix your eyesight. | We encourage you to be open-minded and consider all of the options available to you, instead of just ours. We're all about engaging those critical thinking skills. If you can understand vision biology yourself, then you are in a better position to decide what is and isn't likely to fix your eyesight. |
Latest revision as of 08:50, 5 June 2023
This guide will show you how to doubt the reduced lens method, when you're coming across it for the first time.
Obviously, you should doubt this
This is total rubbish! If myopia was reversible everyone would know by now! This guy is trying to sell me something!
— You, reading literally anything here for the first time
When reading RLM content for the first time, if you seriously didn't doubt this stuff for the first time that would be pretty impressive. Mostly everybody has the same initial experience when they find the site for the first time. "It's all a scam." "I mean, it probably is, right?"
There are, of course plenty of snake oil salespeople on the internet. At a quick glance, the reduced lens method shouldn't seem all that different.
Reasons to reconsider extreme doubt
Here's a few reasons you should, maybe reconsider whether any of this stuff is real instead of dismissing it without thinking:
- There are plenty of success stories
- This entire wiki was built from the ground up by an army of volunteers, for free. There is significant interest
- There are plenty of clinical studies (list) that indicate the axial length of the eyeball is not fixed and can change over time. We didn't write these studies, we're just applying their lessons.
We encourage you to be open-minded and consider all of the options available to you, instead of just ours. We're all about engaging those critical thinking skills. If you can understand vision biology yourself, then you are in a better position to decide what is and isn't likely to fix your eyesight.