- Mar 10, 2009
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Re: Re:
I've also been pretty vocal about the bulldust scenario of having big time dopers or doping enablers still involved in running components of the sport and not cooperating/working with the anti-doping effort. My public comments are not confined to this forum though.
Sometimes I express my level of displeasure in person or privately though, like I did with one of my team mates went positive (back when I was racing). That was a pretty deflating experience.
My comments in this thread are in the context of what one can actually tell from such power estimates (of which there is substantial over reach and misunderstanding) and the methods of obtaining data. I think it helps the anti-doping effort to use legitimate means to catch dopers. Using illegitimate means blurs the ethical line between those doping and those seeking to uncover doping.
I also think a more critical appraisal of the current trend of using power estimates as evidence of doping is needed. It makes for a nice publicity opportunity for some though.
Do I think "current rider X" is doping? Perhaps, perhaps not. Often I simply don't know. I don't see why having a strong opinion one way or another is necessary. Not knowing is quite a legitimate position to hold especially when both positions are entirely plausible.
What I do do though is make a critical appraisal wrt the nature of evidence that can reliable inform such opinion. I prefer to avoid confirmation bias. If say my opinion leans strongly one way, then rather than look for "pixels" of data that support such a position, a sound skeptical (in a scientific sense) mind looks for reasons their opinion or belief might be wrong and seeks to assess all evidence and to question its validity, reliability and relevance. Do I always achieve that? No, but I try.
In science (not that I'm a scientist), it's quite OK to say we don't know, we don't have enough relevant information, and simply having more unhelpful or unreliable data is not going to help.
I think it's also a fallacy for those that use a shotgun approach to naming dopers to say they are right when someone is revealed to have doped, without evaluating the entirety of the success of their method. Do such people point out the number of times they are wrong? No, of course not.
It also doesn't take a genius to throw a dart at the dopeology podium chart and hit a blue square.
Yes, I've been highly vocal in my level of public pissed off-edness with respect to dopers, even more so their enablers, and the insidious impact they've had on the sport and the way it grossly distorted the opportunities not just for the riders but the support staff and how it has become associated with a corrupt environment in other ways.Dear Wiggo said:Just curious if you have ever ranted / vented like this when a doper has been caught, Alex?
I've also been pretty vocal about the bulldust scenario of having big time dopers or doping enablers still involved in running components of the sport and not cooperating/working with the anti-doping effort. My public comments are not confined to this forum though.
Sometimes I express my level of displeasure in person or privately though, like I did with one of my team mates went positive (back when I was racing). That was a pretty deflating experience.
My comments in this thread are in the context of what one can actually tell from such power estimates (of which there is substantial over reach and misunderstanding) and the methods of obtaining data. I think it helps the anti-doping effort to use legitimate means to catch dopers. Using illegitimate means blurs the ethical line between those doping and those seeking to uncover doping.
I also think a more critical appraisal of the current trend of using power estimates as evidence of doping is needed. It makes for a nice publicity opportunity for some though.
Do I think "current rider X" is doping? Perhaps, perhaps not. Often I simply don't know. I don't see why having a strong opinion one way or another is necessary. Not knowing is quite a legitimate position to hold especially when both positions are entirely plausible.
What I do do though is make a critical appraisal wrt the nature of evidence that can reliable inform such opinion. I prefer to avoid confirmation bias. If say my opinion leans strongly one way, then rather than look for "pixels" of data that support such a position, a sound skeptical (in a scientific sense) mind looks for reasons their opinion or belief might be wrong and seeks to assess all evidence and to question its validity, reliability and relevance. Do I always achieve that? No, but I try.
In science (not that I'm a scientist), it's quite OK to say we don't know, we don't have enough relevant information, and simply having more unhelpful or unreliable data is not going to help.
I think it's also a fallacy for those that use a shotgun approach to naming dopers to say they are right when someone is revealed to have doped, without evaluating the entirety of the success of their method. Do such people point out the number of times they are wrong? No, of course not.
It also doesn't take a genius to throw a dart at the dopeology podium chart and hit a blue square.
