Re: Re:
scientists are being quoted in newspapers and TV programs on a daily basis.
Should all that be discarded as "it's not science, it's journalism"? facepalm
So all of Froome's physiological data published in the Esquire article isn't science either? It's just journalism? double facepalm.
So if a journo calls me tomorrow in my capacity as scientist, I can tell him the earth is flat, he can print it, and yet nobody can hold me accountable for it, because it's just journalism? triple facepalm.
Then Jacques De Molay goes for the quadruple facepalm by suggesting that because Swart didn't repeat that nonsense in the podcast we should pretend he never said those words in the first place.
Look, Swart has had multiple opportunities to distance himself from those words.
To my knowledge, he hasn't. Neither on twitter nor in any of the podcasts. (and I'm sure Jacques will correct me if wrong).
In fact, the words have been re-quoted in several larger newspapers, and again, Swart has allowed that to happen, he hasn't distanced himself from that.
And on twitter he has explicitly endorsed and lauded the article, so that would include his quotes at the bottom of the article.
Yes, he's been more nuanced in the podcast. But I don't see how that should deflect from those statements in the Esquire article. Those statements are either awfully bad and sloppy science, or deliberately misleading. Again, choice is yours.
this of course.Dear Wiggo said:Davesta said:sniper said:If it isn't bad science, it's pseudo-science. Your choice.
To reiterate my prior point - it's not science, it's journalism. It'll be science once a scientific study has been posted in a peer-review journal, and then we can judge the full conclusion accordingly. As of now, the full scientific process has not been completed, and thus we can't claim anything to be bad or pseudo science.
That's not to say that allowing the publishing of that quote wasn't a mistake, however, as I've previously stated.
It would be science if he followed a scientific methodology. Publishing means diddly squat in terms of "is it science". There are enough examples around to prove this point, let me know if I need to post any.
ie it does not have to be published in a journal to be "science".
This new "published in a journal" religion is as revolting as all the others.
scientists are being quoted in newspapers and TV programs on a daily basis.
Should all that be discarded as "it's not science, it's journalism"? facepalm
So all of Froome's physiological data published in the Esquire article isn't science either? It's just journalism? double facepalm.
So if a journo calls me tomorrow in my capacity as scientist, I can tell him the earth is flat, he can print it, and yet nobody can hold me accountable for it, because it's just journalism? triple facepalm.
Then Jacques De Molay goes for the quadruple facepalm by suggesting that because Swart didn't repeat that nonsense in the podcast we should pretend he never said those words in the first place.
Look, Swart has had multiple opportunities to distance himself from those words.
To my knowledge, he hasn't. Neither on twitter nor in any of the podcasts. (and I'm sure Jacques will correct me if wrong).
In fact, the words have been re-quoted in several larger newspapers, and again, Swart has allowed that to happen, he hasn't distanced himself from that.
And on twitter he has explicitly endorsed and lauded the article, so that would include his quotes at the bottom of the article.
Yes, he's been more nuanced in the podcast. But I don't see how that should deflect from those statements in the Esquire article. Those statements are either awfully bad and sloppy science, or deliberately misleading. Again, choice is yours.
