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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous Alex said...

Invalid claims may be due to ignorance of what constitutes validity in a particular case. Imprecise information may result from inadvertency or from an unsound, but not necessarily sinister, means of gathering it.

If culpable ignorance or the intention to deceive can be established, perhaps then and only then, is it reasonable to describe an inaccuracy as sinful.

One sin that's endemic in modern administration is the deliberate intention to mislead by representing ideological purposes as objective data or vice versa.

30 April 2011 at 17:14

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

" Imprecise information may result from inadvertency or from an unsound, but not necessarily sinister, means of gathering it."

Well, yes - but why are incompetent people gathering data, analyzing it, publishing inferences?

The short answer is professionalization and careerism.

For example in 'medical research' more than 95 percent of the people are incompetent because they do not know anything about medicine - nor do they care about their ignorance.

They do it because they are paid, and to get the status of pretending to improve health.

This kind of ignorance is culpable.

30 April 2011 at 19:43

Blogger The Crow said...

As important, or more so, than any form of measurement, is honesty.
Without it, nothing else is valid.

30 April 2011 at 20:20

Anonymous Alex said...

Depending on the circumstances, incompetence is undesirable but is it always sinful?

I was not aware that medical research is sometimes conducted by people who are culpably ignorant. I suspect, of course, that some 'researchers' are more or less expected to 'find' therapeutic answers that will be advantageous to the manufacturers of drugs and such like.

On the pretence of improving health, here's a case in point. GPs will now importune patients whom they consider should be persuaded to take statins. I don't know how effective these drugs are in lowering cholesterol; but if doctors have a cash incentive to prescribe them wholesale, this is bad medicine, I think.

1 May 2011 at 08:14

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

While there may be individual exceptions, I believe that statins do greatly more harm than good; they make many people feel worse, and cause actual damage in some (I, for example, had my vision permanently damaged by statins when I was foolish enough to believe the hype) - indeed the whole 'lipid hypothesis' of heart disease is nonsense and always has been.

Probably, the epidemic of heart disease of the middle 20th century was caused by some unidentified infectious agent - like most epidemics.

For more evidence you could try doing some relevant word searches on Dennis Mangan's blog - http://mangans.blogspot.com/

1 May 2011 at 15:22