Sentences with phrase «call anecdotal evidence»

Yes tom, it's called anecdotal evidence.
That's called anecdotal evidence.
Proof isn't in the pudding; that's called anecdotal evidence and doesn't account for the placebo effect, which is 99 % of the way these unscrupulous industries stay in business, the other 1 % being the foolishness of the victims they trick into believing their stories.

Not exact matches

Some of it is anecdotal evidence, such as stories about call committees and bishops who can not find enough talented clergy to replace retiring clergy.
I find it very telling when people who believe in things for which they only have anecdotal evidence call people who demand proof «closed minded».
«There's a lot of anecdotal evidence for how animals and even plants respond to totality,» when the moon completely blocks the sun, says Elise Ricard, spokesperson for an eclipse project called Life Responds at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco...
Food - related calls have been documented in many animals, including chimpanzees and bonobos, but aside from anecdotal reports from zoos, there was no evidence of it in gorillas.
Food - related calls have been documented in many animals, including chimps and bonobos, but apart from anecdotal reports from zoos, there had been no evidence of it in wild gorillas.
Based on anecdotal evidence, Call Me by Your Name, which first premiered all the way back in January on a snowy evening in Park City, Utah, is one of the hottest tickets at N.Y.F.F. Which isn't all that surprising — there are a lotta gays in New York City!
Only anecdotal evidence has been offered in support of the claim that charter schools systematically remove students with disabilities, and little rigorous research has considered the underlying causes of the difference between the percentage of charter - school students and district - school students enrolled in special education, the so - called «special education gap.»
Brian O'Leary at Magellan Media Partners spends a lot of time trying to put actual data to this question, and trying to convince publishers not to make a DRM call based on anecdotal evidence.
The cause of limber tail has always been somewhat mysterious, with anecdotal evidence suggesting it happens more often in larger working dog breeds like Labrador retrievers, and has been reported in individual dogs who've recently swam in cold water (it's also sometimes called «swimmer's tail» or «cold tail.»)
The so - called evidence was anecdotal, including unsubstantiated, mis - reported news items.
... but anecdotal evidence suggests that, after you've been approved, you can call up Chase and asked to be matched to an 80,000 point bonus offer that I can't seem to find anywhere.
«Anecdotal data» is the term that climate scientists (IPCC, etc.) assign to what tony b calls «historical evidence» This can be old sea charts, notes by explorers, crop records, old chronicals of mines being covered by advancing ice and snow, etc..
It would be misleading to give the impression that those involved in climate science are unaware of the limitations of historical documentary evidence (so called «anecdotal» material) or the potential shortcomings of proxies such as tree rings.
Anecdotal evidence indicates that requests to unpublish have picked up in the United States since the Court of Justice of the European Union in 2014 created the so - called right to be forgotten.
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