fergl100 wrote:
Pogo, I'm a scientist myself (whats your field?).
Originally a physicist. Nowadays I write computer software in order to keep myself out of mischief and off the streets. Oh, and oddly, I also have a degree in Law..

fergl100 wrote:
I disagree with you and PeterE and Pete317, all formidable adversaries I realise. While a agree the evidence is not statistically significant and therefore of no use whatsover to my beliefs, it is my belief that it will become so. However small that risk may turn out to be.
Maybe, but to look at the subject from a reasonably rigorous "scientific" viewpoint, you scupper your own case with the honest statement that there has never been a statistically significant result in any study on ETS. Indeed, many of the studies when viewed at the P<0.05 confidence level bracket unity - consequently it's not completely beyond the bounds of reason to suggest that ETS might even be good for you - indeed, the WHO study's
only statistically significant result was that exposure to ETS in children actually reduced their likelyhood of developing lung cancer in later life.
fergl100 wrote:
If e.g. there is a risk to a smoker smoking a cigarette of X then if the secondary passive smoker inhales one 25,000 th (or whatever) from that smokers cigarette then he will have one 25,000th of that risk. Small but real.
I think that Pete has already quoted Paracelsus on this one..
