Lying liars: Wakefield and Rose
Jan. 28th, 2010 11:01 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I'm filled with smiles today to see that the BMA are heartily spanking Andrew Wakefield, the doctor whose bogus - knowingly bogus - research started the whole stupid false MMR flap and gave credibility to a whole generation of vaccine-phobic woo-mongers telling people that a shot will turn their kids into Rain Man, (here, buy this crochet spiral chicken liver instead, it'll purge toxins and align your native reiki chakras). Wakefield, you are a lying liar.
And I'm filled with weary to see that the latest Final Nail in the coffin of global warming, yes, there are so many final nails that you have to wonder whether there's any wood at all or, for that matter, room for a body (alas, it aten't ded and aten't dying: eppur si riscalda no matter what the lying liars write) -- *breathe* that this latest Final Nail, Rose's piece in the Daily Mail about Himalaya glaciers, is a big fat lying lie. The boffin at the heart of the story, Murari Lal, was heinously misquoted and fibbed over; the story pretty much made up out of whole cloth. Rose, you are a lying liar.
And I'm filled with weary to see that the latest Final Nail in the coffin of global warming, yes, there are so many final nails that you have to wonder whether there's any wood at all or, for that matter, room for a body (alas, it aten't ded and aten't dying: eppur si riscalda no matter what the lying liars write) -- *breathe* that this latest Final Nail, Rose's piece in the Daily Mail about Himalaya glaciers, is a big fat lying lie. The boffin at the heart of the story, Murari Lal, was heinously misquoted and fibbed over; the story pretty much made up out of whole cloth. Rose, you are a lying liar.
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Date: 2010-01-30 09:47 pm (UTC)People following celebrities (as proofs) without doing their own homework deserve what they get.
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Date: 2010-02-01 11:16 pm (UTC)Like the t-shirt says, "it's more complicated than that"...
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Date: 2010-02-02 04:22 am (UTC)You don't seem to understand what the argument is actually about. You seem to think it's about science or something.
The real argument is that the religion of science, subsection "climate change" think the world is ending. Well just like any other religion and their world ending, that's fine. You fellas can panic all you like.
But where it does get tricky is when any bunch of believers don't want to pay the bill for their beliefs. And expect everyone else to pay as well.
I know that's pretty standard stuff though and pretty much every group of religious folks and believers feel the same about their own "end of the world". Whether it's building a Tower to reach Heaven, or everyone drinking the Cool Aid. It's not enough for them to foot their own bill.
The proof of this is striking. And rather undeniable. If those proposing this scenairo decide to pay for their own ark/whatever end of world avoidence criteria _and_ their cheque/credi was good then there wouldn't be an argument would there.......!
If the believers were front with the cash to do the stuff they claim needs to be done, and to pay for the process changes _they_ _want_ - just like all the other customers and their wants and needs. Then the producers wouldn't _be_ arguing it would be "would you like that in gren or blue", "when shall we start the process for you". But nope, those broke people for some reason think others should pay for their theories.
Well that might be the religious beliefs of the climate changers. But the religious belief of the merchants and manufactures is (1) You want it then you pay for it, (2) I can provide it to you at your reasonable cost. This has been around for longer than "science" and is a well working model. Remember these guys will make and sell you anything (at your cost); you want cookies the shape of Michael Jacksons original nose, done; you want bumper stickers saying "God does it with Virgins", fine; you want a fine ark to fix the end of the world, did you have plans already or should we bring in a boat designer?
As usual, the question is simply "Who pays?" and if you haven't realised that yet, theny it is a matter of brain damage.
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Date: 2010-02-02 04:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-03 09:01 pm (UTC)Fail.
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Date: 2010-02-04 12:12 am (UTC)Don't let the blindness of your beliefs mask what is going on. Is that not the first step in critical thinking ... an your absolute position on it a symptom, under your own scriptures, that you have moved from critical science, to "science-ism"
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Date: 2010-02-05 01:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-05 06:12 pm (UTC)I'm even less surprised at the unneccessary emotive put-down. "Babbling".
You are in possession, or perhaps more accurately statement, "being possessed by", a belief system.
It has well documented rules and these are written down (in many places). This process is known as "doctrine". There are those that follow the written rules, "orthodoxy", and those who break them (like the immunisation guy).
Like most laypeople you are operating out of a subset of those rules adapted for your situation. You aren't peer reviewing what you've been told. You don't have the resources to check the science holds true for you applications/situations. Proper "science" only provides hypothesis and theory, which are then tested locally by engineers and technicians. The purview of the scientific study is very narrow as they can only test a few things at a time, and even then only in certain locations and conditions. The result isn't "Truth" but a Theory, something often lost on the layperson.
In common with other belief systems, many of the experts get together and discuss and analyse the "Truth" and application in the world of their belief system. Are the old experts/cardinals of the RC Church any less regarded by their peers than the scientific experts of today? Are the Imman any less qualified in their system?
You happen to think your "science" is the thing which is "Real" and "Accurate", and they believe theirs is. And they have their criterias, and you have yours. But at the end of the day you're all just playing within a belief system.
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Date: 2010-02-06 08:06 am (UTC)And if a method came along that was more useful still - more predictive, able to integrate subjective and objective experience, say - I'd jump. Of course, so would the scientific community, which would mean you'd carry on saying that it was just the same old thing anyway.
I suspect you've got a dogmatic position that science is no different from religion. They're not even the same class of phenomenon.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-06 06:02 pm (UTC)If you don't understand that's what it comes from then there is no point continuing this discussion.
You see that RC church thing? You've heard of Protestants? The Reformation? The various councils? The invent of Islam?
These are all "more useful" in the eyes of their believers, thus splinter groups pick up and run with them. And occasionally they will change their own position, for example whether or not to burn heretics at the stake, or to accept a limited about of "scientific" exploration. There is little difference in the belief system that takes "Jesus Christ, Man or God?" and "Atomic Nuclei, Pudding or Orbitals?". In both cases it is tested by the same types of minds using the tools their experts think is relevant, and the models updated appropriately.
Their is little difference between dogma and currently accepted methodology. Re-labelling it doesn't make it into something different.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-02 04:47 am (UTC)It's only complicated if you want to make it like that.
Celebrity == Popular person who appears on mass media.
Skills for Celebrity: Appears noticable on media, catches attention, .... that's about it.
I suppose you could ask your cat for advice, there's the likelihood it's as informed as the celebrity. Sure some celebrities make the effort but that does justify them, and they're not responsible for your arse. You are. At the end of the day, you are the only one truly responsible and having a full share of interest in your butt/life. It sucks perhaps. It's not part of the group happy, which can be hard for some people to handle.
And at the final count, it's who you're willing to believe and how well you want to test it. And if that's Doctor Jo's snake oil because Doctor Jo has doctor in his name, or you trust some TV personality cause they're on TV, or you trust politicians because they lead the country and they're there to represent the people and the peoples' interests aren't they... (yeah right)
Of course you can disbelieve me, take stuff from experts on faith. And then watch me smile as they're later proved wrong, change their minds or just turn out to be cashing in on their popularity (or building that popularity).
Of course "the herd" do like to make other people, in fact, anyone else, responsible for their desires/needs...
no subject
Date: 2010-02-05 06:23 am (UTC)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cargo_cult_science
You _have_ re-tested the phenomena in you local instance, haven't you.... Not just taking it on "faith" and "popular scholarship" (albeit popular scientific scholarship)
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Date: 2010-02-05 01:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-02-05 06:01 pm (UTC)That is what science is about, or are you renaming what you're doing as "science".
You of course realise just blankly throwing up a claim of "strawman" without identifying the falacy is a "Strawman" falacy. As it is not relevant to the discussion and although easily disproveable, it doesn't add anything to your point.
Which brings us to the cirrect application of the ad homein. As such silly strawman attempts, when you should know better, point to the likelihood that you are personally standing on shakey ground in your analysis of the topic, leading to a high probability of a similiar loose analysis of the original topic.
no subject
Date: 2010-02-06 08:00 am (UTC)And it's always been untrue: biologists don't have to re-trace the voyage of the Beagle and dig ammonites out of Lyme Bay to have valid skills. Astronomers don't have to dig wells at the equator. The whole point of the scientific method is that you can reliably stand on the shoulders of giants.
That's why the scientific method has made more progress in the last 350 years than all the woo in the world before it, after all.
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Date: 2010-02-06 05:54 pm (UTC)Each scientific theory may stand on the shoulders, but if you go look up the detail of proper scientific process (aka applying the technology) you'll notice that each investigation results on in a theory. The more times the theory is tested then the higher probably, the higher confidence level that said result _might_ apply in a similiar situation (for no two events can be exactly the same).
To deny this is to a kind of "lay-faith" about the scientific principles. And yes the increase of probablity does mean that a naturalistic religion (ie process) based on interative testing should give a model that we can take at faith value. (which is why the people wanted to people the anti-immune doctor).
But there's where the speculatioin comes in. We haven't been able to test some of these things, only give levels of confidence. If a hypothesis says the global warming will change by 2 degrees in the next year and it moves by 5 then the scientific theory is wrong. It doesn't prove it "more right" just because went in the right direction, and they can't do as I have seen so many PhD students do and rebuild the results values from their data just qualify their funding/paper!!!! If it's out of window of the results then their model is incorrect, and that means when it gets put into application elsewhere, in the field, it's confidence level is way off. But to back such theories then is a "denial faith" no different from Moonies, or proponents of the guys on anti-immunisation (or early cold fusion)
no subject
Date: 2010-02-06 08:37 pm (UTC)=
...people wanted to believe the anti-immune...
Sorry error in the first editing.