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Infer by comparing multiple pieces of information

Hey, it didn’t rain tonight.....

“There is a big temperature difference between day and night yesterday and today. Choose your clothes carefully and manage your physical condition.”

One of those people spends time in a warm room in the cold season, and goes out to a cool bar in the hot season. I envy you for spending most of the year in a polo shirt and jacket.
In my way of thinking, the bigger the temperature difference, the more fun things are. Both in my clothing choices and in what I eat to regulate my body temperature.

What’s the most banal technique for scrutinizing information?
The number one criterion by which information is scrutinized is comparison. The credibility of information can be inferred by comparing multiple pieces of information.
But I want you to know that there is another criterion for such a mediocre method. It is absolute selection.
In this approach, information is culled based on absolute criteria. Information is not compared.

“It looks like it’s going to rain tonight. The temperature won’t drop much, but the wind is expected to blow a little strong.”
Maybe he’s a meteorologist. Because you have a lot of information, but you don’t put any of it into practice.
However, technically, the most important thing to keep in mind when managing your physical condition is the wind speed rather than the temperature. On windy days, I recommend wearing a jacket that protects you from the wind. Let’s deceive the high and low temperatures depending on the mood.

What are the absolute criteria for sifting through information?
In addition, this approach does not evaluate the information, it only results in whether it is accepted or not.
However, it is not sufficiently clear what the absolute criteria are. Maybe it’s not information.

In the end, I couldn’t find anyone to treat me to dinner, so I stopped by a hangout late at night. He is standing by the wall of a hangout alley. Hey, it didn’t rain tonight.

COP27: What are they saying at the climate summit? | Reuters
COP27: What are they saying at the climate summit? | Reuters… "Greenhouse gas emissions keep growing. …

That’s all for today’s post. Thank you

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