- Apr 3, 2016
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Re: Re:
Well that is sort of the point. It's not out there very publicly. Besides, we tend to assume these days that anything published means also being published on the Web. We assume that there there is a historical record reflected on the Web of things published pre-web, but this isn't the case.
This is why it is a little frustrating when one sees people asking for Web links as evidence or proof of a point with the implicit idea that if one can't be found the point or claim is false. This is a fallacy.
ALL of LeMond's career was pre-Web. The absence of a web-searchable record proves nothing.
Maxiton said:kwikki said:gillan1969 said:sniper said:And with all due respect, this "I saw it, therefore I know it" argument is getting a bit rusty.
I mean, you saw what, exactly?
I watched the story unfold...I saw the context...events and facts happened in real time...i am not joining
Actually gillan is right.
I'm getting the distinct impression from the threads in which I am participating that some/many posters, but in particular those with the most itchy trigger fingers when it comes to accusations of doping, are relatively new to the sport but also to life. By that, I mean that they are under 30, and so have not even experienced the 1980s let alone the 80s and 90s with the viewpoint of an adult.
Why does this matter? Context...as Gillian says.
You might be able to Google results for races you weren't alive to see, and you might even be able to watch some of the major ones on YouTube. But what you can't do is Google up an understanding of what else was going on or not and it is a very easy mistake to interpret historical events from the perspective of today.
Let me give a more concrete example. I've read people criticising riders for not 'speaking out' about doping at the time. But here's the thing...they did. You can't Google it because it wasn't reported, and it wasn't reported because cycling had nothing of the profile it has today. Not only that but communication technology was limited to print and perhaps a total of 3 television channels. Certainly there was no possibility for public discussion and sharing of information prior to the growth of Internet use, which didn't really happen jntil the turn of the millennium.
It's hard to overstate just how much the world has changed over the last 40 years, but if you didn't actually live it you'll struggle to understand.
I'm not saying this in a patronising way, and I certainly am not trying to discourage the young from having and expressing an opinion.
You make, IMO, an excellent point. But if you don't mind my saying so it would be a stronger if you could manage to back it up with concrete examples. Maybe some quotes from print media, scans of print media, that sort of thing. Or even some anecdotal recollections.
Well that is sort of the point. It's not out there very publicly. Besides, we tend to assume these days that anything published means also being published on the Web. We assume that there there is a historical record reflected on the Web of things published pre-web, but this isn't the case.
This is why it is a little frustrating when one sees people asking for Web links as evidence or proof of a point with the implicit idea that if one can't be found the point or claim is false. This is a fallacy.
ALL of LeMond's career was pre-Web. The absence of a web-searchable record proves nothing.
