- Jul 17, 2015
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Re: Re:
I've mentioned confirmation bias. I'm suggesting an approach to avoid it. Your position is akin to saying that even a stopped clock tells the right time twice a day.
rhubroma said:wendybnt said:rhubroma said:To the bolded, the only ex-dopers I have read who have come out in support of Froome seem to me to be motivated by an even worse form of opportunism than that which drives Jalabert. Since their only hope in still gaining some economic advantage lies in the narrative of a "changed" sport. It is even more spineless because they know what they say is utter BS, in an attempt to favorably condition public oppinion for their own standing.
Exactly! Any you dismiss their views on the basis of the motivation for them, which means that if you judge (as I do) Jalabert to have the same motivations then you have to dismiss his views too. It is called fairness and objectivity rather than confirmation bias.
I would dismiss Jalabert's statements if they were hogwash (to use Hothra's term). Psychological behavior should remind you how much "fairness" and "objectivity" is greatly compromised and the interprative problems this has caused. Here truth and disimulation go hand in hand, and there are times when one's lies reveal the very truth in what is said in other cases.That he is a hypocrite, in other words, leads me to conclude that I can take nothing he says about himself seriously, but this doesn't automatically render what he says about others hogwash. To me this stikes at the very issue of descernment, you yourself have implicitely accused others of lacking.![]()
I've mentioned confirmation bias. I'm suggesting an approach to avoid it. Your position is akin to saying that even a stopped clock tells the right time twice a day.