Noone can. LNT is the favored hypothesis, but the problem is that at levels in the vicinity of background radiation, the expected effect is so small that the necessary sample-sizes to confirm it empirically are entirely unreasonable. The people arguing hormesis sometimes point to the lack of any detectable cancer spikes in natural experiments (areas with higher background radiation) but that is at most mildly suggestive - to many confounding factors. In order to settle this, one would have to.. I dont know - build an automated high speed cancer detection aparatus for insects, breed and test a few million bugs in a salt mine for an ultra-low radiation baseline, then do it again after elevating the radiation levels in said salt mine in steps? And even if you did that, people would likely challenge the validity of the animal model.
Well, if LNT is valid for all radiation levels comparable to or greater than natural background levels, then it's valid for (almost) all practical purposes.
I recently asked two questions on Quora with similar question structures, and the similarities and differences between the responses were interesting.
Question #1: Anthropogenic global warming, the greenhouse effect, and the historical weather record
I asked the question here. Question statement:
In response to some comments, I added the following question details:
I also posted to Facebook here asking my friends about the pushback to my use of the term "belief" in my question.
Question #2: Effect of increase in the minimum wage on unemployment
I asked the question here. Question statement:
I added the following question details:
I also posted the question to Facebook here.
Similarities between the questions
The questions are structurally similar, and belong to a general question type of considerable interest to the LessWrong audience. The common features to the questions:
Looking for help
I'm interested in thoughts from the people here on these questions: