ladyattis:Notice, I didn't dispute that, but you're not listening. In the other countries, it's not common to liberally use sugars in all their foodstuffs. In the US it is. Why?
ladyattis:That would be a boon in terms of health and the market in one shot.
ladyattis:Plus, your whole thing about science being objective? That's one thing I could easily dismantle here, but that's a whole other thread to make for some other time.
First, yes, many countries subsidize agriculture. The Eurozone is a bitch when it comes to this, but oddly they don't subsidize corn. It must be a culinary/taste thing. Second, genetics may factor into it strongly, but I think if that were the case then the logical choice is to stop subsidizing a known sweetener. Third, food stuffs around the world don't have sugar in the ratios we do. You can take just about any book by an ethnic chef and see the difference (mostly there's a preference for fats over sugars in most cultures).
As for my point about science not being objective, you're not grasping the gravity of my statement. I'm saying science doesn't even have the monopoly on the pragmatic truths of our world. Science is fundamentally limited because of methodological monism. It loses more in the attempt to universalize on a simple means to know the world than it gains.
"The power of liberty going forward is in decentralization. Not in leaders, but in decentralized activism. In a market process." -- liberty student
seems to me that most science isn't a hard black and white realm of facts. This debate is about nutrition. There are plenty of paleo Austrians on these boards who have found the lifestyle very helpful, but that alone of course proves nothing. I think shooting off the OPs broader points would have made more sense. Evolution and Climate Science are both similar to economics in that you can't run true experiements. Its pretty hard to run true experiments in nutrition as well. You would need lots of money and would have to basically monitor every aspect of several hundred or even thousands of people for months to properly account for all the variables at play.
I love seeing good points corroborated.
Ladyattis:First, yes, many countries subsidize agriculture. The Eurozone is a bitch when it comes to this, but oddly they don't subsidize corn. It must be a culinary/taste thing. Second, genetics may factor into it strongly, but I think if that were the case then the logical choice is to stop subsidizing a known sweetener.
Ladyattis:Third, food stuffs around the world don't have sugar in the ratios we do. You can take just about any book by an ethnic chef and see the difference (mostly there's a preference for fats over sugars in most cultures).
Ladyattis:You can take just about any book by an ethnic chef and see the difference (mostly there's a preference for fats over sugars in most cultures).
Ladyattis:As for my point about science not being objective, you're not grasping the gravity of my statement. I'm saying science doesn't even have the monopoly on the pragmatic truths of our world. Science is fundamentally limited because of methodological monism. It loses more in the attempt to universalize on a simple means to know the world than it gains.
Joe:seems to me that most science isn't a hard black and white realm of facts. This debate is about nutrition. There are plenty of paleo Austrians on these boards who have found the lifestyle very helpful,
Joe:I think shooting off the OPs broader points would have made more sense. Evolution and Climate Science are both similar to economics in that you can't run true experiements. Its pretty hard to run true experiments in nutrition as well. You would need lots of money and would have to basically monitor every aspect of several hundred or even thousands of people for months to properly account for all the variables at play.
"Well the way I interpreted controlled studies is just that the results are statistically likely in the rest of the population. That's not really a "hard" universalization. Its also not science per se but the scientific method, which I recognize is non sequitur. It just has statistical plausibility. Whether you think statistics is relevant to pragmatism..."
Statistics that is frequentist in nature is boolsheet. I'll just say that for giggles. But seriously, controlled groups aren't hard fast absolutes, that's why you'll see multiple studies deal with similar circumstances or issues and come up with extremely variable results. That means, they're really not describing anything other than what is true for the circumstances at the time. That's why people talk of the black swan being more important than the white ones, but even that doesn't go far enough to describe the inadequacies of modern science.
Modern science has abandoned many things to become what it is, and what's lost is context. And you only get that from considering the seemingly non-scientific issues of a more philosophical nature. How you approach knowledge is as important as how you acquire it.
ladyattis:Statistics that is frequentist in nature is boolsheet. I'll just say that for giggles. But seriously, controlled groups aren't hard fast absolutes, that's why you'll see multiple studies deal with similar circumstances or issues and come up with extremely variable results. That means, they're really not describing anything other than what is true for the circumstances at the time.
ladyattis:That's why people talk of the black swan being more important than the white ones, but even that doesn't go far enough to describe the inadequacies of modern science.
ladyattis:Modern science has abandoned many things to become what it is, and what's lost is context. And you only get that from considering the seemingly non-scientific issues of a more philosophical nature. How you approach knowledge is as important as how you acquire it.
Sieben:This is correct. But it only discredits individual studies, not the actual philosophy of controlled studies. Metastudies are an attempt to deal with this (I listed a couple).
Nope, meta-analysis is even softer than individual studies. You have to be careful which studies you combine otherwise, you'll get some funny results.
Sieben:So black swans don't matter that much in nutrition, especially if we're trying to give good general advice. I admit that black swans do matter in other contexts, like war. Being 99% sure there's no war next month is a pretty crappy place to be in.
Actually, they matter in all aspects of knowledge. If it doesn't work for X person, that means your assumptions about X person are W-R-O-N-G. So, you have to consider alternatives both in method and knowledge.
Sieben:I don't understand. Can you elaborate?
Why can I find right answers from wrong assumptions? That's a good start for a question, I think.
ladyattis:Nope, meta-analysis is even softer than individual studies. You have to be careful which studies you combine otherwise, you'll get some funny results.
ladyattis:Actually, they matter in all aspects of knowledge. If it doesn't work for X person, that means your assumptions about X person are W-R-O-N-G. So, you have to consider alternatives both in method and knowledge.
ladyattis:Why can I find right answers from wrong assumptions? That's a good start for a question, I think.
Sieben:True. But they are an *attempt* to deal with the problem of low sample sizes. And the idea that you can improve study accuracy by increasing sample sizes also holds statistical water.
Well, that's why it's better to do it with one study than many. Ever read about the funny meta-analysis of 35k people using their birthsigns vs their perceived personality traits? The researchers claimed it was proof that horoscopes were accurate, but when it was found out that it was an meta-analysis and their definition of personality traits a tad loose, they were laughed at. :3~
Sieben:I do consider alternatives. But only for person X. For everyone else my tools are working fine. And the alternatives I consider for X would also probably be based on the scientific method - trial and error, or educated guesses, etc.
But you're not considering the alternative that your theory is wrong. That's the problem.
Sieben:Because the assumptions are wrong. But the assumption that a sample size of 10,000 will be able to represent a large amount of the total population is correct, or at least statistically very very likely.
Samples have nothing to do with it. It has to do with that knowledge is not deterministic in its formation. Knowledge follows not from cause-effect, but from another basis altogether. So, drop the assumption that statistics is the gateway to knowledge, it's not scientific to even use it in this context.
ladyattis:But you're not considering the alternative that your theory is wrong. That's the problem.
ladyattis:Samples have nothing to do with it. It has to do with that knowledge is not deterministic in its formation. Knowledge follows not from cause-effect, but from another basis altogether. So, drop the assumption that statistics is the gateway to knowledge, it's not scientific to even use it in this context.
Lulz, personal attacks over fructose.
Not to change the topic, but what do you guys think of artificial sweetners causing cancer (not fat gain)? I use them a lot. Webmd and some other sites I've been on said they're fine, but social folklore tells me I will get cancer. Will I?
Freedom has always been the only route to progress.
Sieben:If my theory is that the study is representative of a lot of (not necessarily all) people, then no its not wrong just because of black
Um... Do you realize you just went against the very scientific method you're trying to protect? Any case which falsifies the theory means the theory is WRONG according the modern scientific method. This the same method taught in highschool, entry level college courses, and used as the general guideline to most of the sciences. So you can't have your cake of saying "I'm pro-modern science" and eat from a modified/truncated version of it. So, either you support methodological pluralism, therefore you could make a cause for limited theories, but even then such theories would be purely masturbatory in nature since they don't describe anything useful (gee lots of people are like X, but a few of them in that category are like Y too...). Meaning, it's not predictive.
And I won't bother quoting your statistics rambling any further since it seems you're not listening. Statistics do not describe reality. They simply describe what we know in terms of their likelihood. Nothing more. It's not the backbone of science. Otherwise, Public Choice Theory wouldn't be a science. Nor would computer SCIENCE (we don't use stats much, but when we do it's usually dealing with programs, rather than algorithms and proofs). Your obsession statistics shows your own lack of understanding of their limits and your own lack of understanding of their actual uses.
If you can't acknowledge that much, then we have nothing to discuss. You're wasting my time and yours.
Ladyattis:Um... Do you realize you just went against the very scientific method you're trying to protect? Any case which falsifies the theory means the theory is WRONG according the modern scientific method.
Ladyattis:This the same method taught in highschool, entry level college courses, and used as the general guideline to most of the sciences. So you can't have your cake of saying "I'm pro-modern science" and eat from a modified/truncated version of it. So, either you support methodological pluralism, therefore you could make a cause for limited theories, but even then such theories would be purely masturbatory in nature since they don't describe anything useful (gee lots of people are like X, but a few of them in that category are like Y too...). Meaning, it's not predictive.
Ladyattis:And I won't bother quoting your statistics rambling any further since it seems you're not listening. Statistics do not describe reality. They simply describe what we know in terms of their likelihood. Nothing more.
Ladyattis:It's not the backbone of science.
Ladyattis:Otherwise, Public Choice Theory wouldn't be a science. Nor would computer SCIENCE (we don't use stats much, but when we do it's usually dealing with programs, rather than algorithms and proofs). Your obsession statistics shows your own lack of understanding of their limits and your own lack of understanding of their actual uses.
Sieben:According to your interpretation there can be no empirical science of man whatsoever because "what if black swan"?
No you can have empiricism, but you have to accept that there's no absolute guarantees to its success. And to deny alternative methods is to invite blind faith to control the discovery of knowledge.
Sieben:Well you're shifting the goalposts here.
No, I'm not.
Sieben:Its the backbone of empirical sciences. Unless you think empirical science is an oxymoron and there should be "science" and "empiricism".
It is an oxymoron.
Sieben:Our results don't give us "laws" or "theories", but they give us probablistic guesses.
So it's masturabatory, thanks for confirming that.
what do you guys think of artificial sweetners causing cancer (not fat gain)?
I'm not an expert in any way, but what I've heard has said that aspartame may cause cancer.
A quick scan of Wikipedia appears to sidpute this claim and cites sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspartame_controversy
If you are interested in alternative viewpoints (which may be incorrect, I don't know), I know some people who read Dr. Mercola, whose thgouhts/evidence on aspartame are here:
http://aspartame.mercola.com/
Note that Dr. Mercola appears to also not believe that HIV causes AIDS (which may or may not affect his validity on the topic of Aspartame).
ladyattis:No you can have empiricism, but you have to accept that there's no absolute guarantees to its success. And to deny alternative methods is to invite blind faith to control the discovery of knowledge.
ladyattis:No, I'm not.
ladyattis:It is an oxymoron.
ladyattis:So it's masturabatory, thanks for confirming that.
Sieben:I meet both of these requirements.
Sieben:Yes you are. First you talk about "truth" and then later in the paragraph you shift to "practicality". Which one is it?
I see no difference between truth and its application. Maybe you do.
Sieben:I'm glad your whole problem with me has been over taxonomy.
Sieben:If you think probabilistics is practical, then no it isn't.
Also, sorry for being short with my responses, I'm busy doing other stuff. Nothing personal.
Sieben, I haven't had the time (or interest) to pore over the studies you linked to. I did find a article that references a study which found that medium-high fructose groups had increased waist/hip ratio, fasting blood glucose levels, and other such markers of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease: http://www.drbriffa.com/2011/06/22/fructose-found-to-be-more-harmful-than-glucose/
Thanks for describing the physiology of fructose metabolism.
Ladyattis:How? Explain, please.
Ladyattis:I see no difference between truth and its application. Maybe you do.
Ladyattis:And it's also over the fact that monism in science has impeded the progress of knowledge. Just sayin'.
Ladyattis:Only in a limited way. Try and use statistics to actually construct a theory. Oh wait, that's unscientific. :3~
Scrooge McDuck:Sieben, I haven't had the time (or interest) to pore over the studies you linked to. I did find a article that references a study which found that medium-high fructose groups had increased waist/hip ratio, fasting blood glucose levels, and other such markers of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease: http://www.drbriffa.com/2011/06/22/fructose-found-to-be-more-harmful-than-glucose/
Sieben:I see a difference between application and truth. Knowing how to accomplish a goal doesn't require you to have a philosophy.
It is if you want to be called a scientist. Process and result comes to form the basis of method(s). Knowing how one influences the other is philosophy. And knowing how to make the influences to your advantage is a science.
Sieben:I think most researchers are open to analytical exercises, but if you can't repeat analytical predictions in laboratories people usually conclude that there must be something wrong with the theory (assuming they cant find anything wrong with the experiment).
And that's the issue right there: experiments are not the end all be all of science. They need to take a backseat like they have for the majority of history. Not to be ignored, but not to be ruling the discourse.
Sieben:You mean we can't use statistics to arrive at scientific law. But we can use statistics to generate a theory that 90% of the population responds positively to medication X.
If you can't get a scientific law then you're just making up a narrative, no better than your opponents. And I can treat their narratives with equal regard from now on.