> You keep ignoring: the basic science of creativity
"Basic science" is something of an oxymoron here. Measuring creativity is anything but basic. You're appealing to intuition—an intuition I share to some extent, but not one that we can call scientific
> The idea you can't see a relationship between three year-old impairment and teen loss of learning
I can see how there might be a relationship. There also might not be: Some kids are late bloomers, and the children in this study hadn't even gone to preschool yet.
Where's the meta-analysis finding a causal link between smartphone use and impaired cognition in teens? If you want to talk about science, you can't extrapolate things like this based on how you figure they're probably working. Science is empirical.
> Your statements are only narrative and narrow, you pretend to grasp ideas and information
You're getting awfully aggressive¹ about this. Have you considered putting your phone down?
When you can revisit these ideas with a scientific manner, then I can respond. Until then you are just spinning narratives.
Ironic that you would level a criticism like this while touting "non-empirical science," whatever that is.
> You chose to make a narrative claim using No Child Left Behind
Do me the courtesy of paraphrasing my claims accurately. I said the drop in test scores you're attributing to phones could more plausibly be caused by NCLB, which is a carefully couched statement that doesn't actually draw any concrete conclusions.
I'm gesturing broadly at the absence of conclusive evidence, and you're telling me you don't need conclusive evidence to make definitive statements. I'm hardly the one spinning narratives here.
Gesturing broadly at a lack of conclusive evidence is simply naysaying the connections that educators, child development experts, neuroscience researchers are detailing. If you can't counter their connections and simply sit on the ledge of denial, you ain't thinking, you're in denial.
Stay in storytelling.