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by FatherOfCurses
8 days ago
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But without any training in experimental methodologies, molecular biology, protein mechanics, pharmacology, or any of the other specialized fields that make up the world of Alzheimer's research, how do you view yourself as qualified to make that conclusion? What body of knowledge are you drawing on to conclude that the experts' reasoning is sound, they are properly controlling their experiments, they are drawing the correct conclusions based on the underlying mechanics? AFAIK even people who do meta-analyses are qualified in the field they are doing the analysis for. |
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I agree that I don't have the qualifications to check whether, for example, a particular cryo-EM study was conducted properly. But I can check whether those who do have such qualifications disagree on the methodology or findings of that particular study. There's a lively debate within the Alzheimer's research community; it's not hard to find dissenting opinions on just about anything, and I actively seek them out, and when such disagreement exists, I avoid weighting any evidence too heavily, unless the disagreement is about broader matters of synthesis or specific statistical or methodological questions in which my non-biological scientific background permits me to reach my own conclusions.
I am also careful not to heavily weight a single assumption-laden preclinical study conducted by a single lab, for example, but instead to look for "smoking gun"-style evidence, in those few cases that it exists, or to look at the bulk of evidence across many studies from many labs, where the specific conclusions do not seem to be seriously in doubt by experts. In general, I've been skeptical, considering alternative explanations wherever it seemed crucial to the bigger picture, and avoiding trusting anything that seemed like it involved knowledge which was heavily in the weeds on stuff that I couldn't understand. I had a personal motivation to understand the genuine truth here, and enough scientific background that I usually know when I'm out of my depth on a specific matter.
I think it's reasonable of you to say: that all sounds well and good, but I just don't know your process well enough to trust it, and you don't have formal qualifications on the matter, so I'll ignore what you say. I certainly wouldn't expect you to take anything on my authority. I see my article essentially as an act of science journalism, and scientific journalists often lack formal training in the field they report on. You can read it and see if the reasoning makes sense and the evidence is convincing, or you can reasonably ignore it and fall back on expert opinions.
I did the investigation precisely because the majority expert viewpoint was being called into question by a lot of non-experts, and I had a personal motivation to find out, genuinely, whether this critique was warranted. If you don't have that motivation, then it's probably not worth your time to do the same. I did, and I came away satisfied.