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- Newsgroups: sci.med.nutrition
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!destroyer!cs.ubc.ca!newsserver.sfu.ca!sfu.ca!altar
- From: altar@beaufort.sfu.ca (Ted Wayn Altar)
- Subject: Re: Calcium/Magnesium
- Message-ID: <altar.725708575@sfu.ca>
- Sender: news@sfu.ca
- Organization: Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C., Canada
- References: <altar.725666594@sfu.ca> <1992Dec29.235244.7619@spdcc.com> <altar.725683440@sfu.ca> <1992Dec30.054649.19891@spdcc.com>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 09:42:55 GMT
- Lines: 207
-
- Ted Wayn Altar writes:
- >>It seems to be yours as you don't bother to cite your references
- >>but simply burden the reader to take your word for it.
-
- Steve Dyer replies:
-
- >That's because everything I've said is part of the general
- literature.
-
- This is a convenient evasion. If one questions or asks for
- documentation of your factual claims, then you simply proclaim
- them ignorant of the "general literature". Hence, we are not
- supposed to ask you to cite where you have read what you claim to
- be conventional wisdom, less we be castigated as ignorant.
-
- Well, this presumption of shared knowledge might be fine if this
- were truly a conference of only specialized experts on vitamin D,
- but it is not. The people here are by and large simply
- intelligent laypersons interested in nutrition. I would think it
- more apposite to the situation, and more respectful of these
- intelligent laypersons, to at least make a little more effort to
- simply reference your claims from the "general literature".
- Since you presume to know it so well, than this should be quite
- easy for your to do.
-
-
- >There's nothing esoteric here; read any reference on vitamin, calcium
- >and steroid metabolism. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary
- >references; common knowledge does not. As I've said before, it isn't
- >my job to tutor your out of your base ignorance;
-
- Then I would like to know what are you here for? Are you here to
- be helpful or insulting, are you here to edify or belittle, are
- you here to teach or pontificate?
-
-
- >ignorance seemingly
- >sufficient to make any claim, however dumb, to sound plausible, especially
- >if it's repeated to you by someone who sounds authoritative.
-
- Exactly! That's why your extraordinary vilification of professor
- Moon as a "crank" requires extraordinary documentation. I have
- yet to see this documentation but I have seen you repeatedly
- vilify and slander professor Moon.
-
-
-
- >Moon's opinion of vitamin D supplementation is decidedly out of the
- >mainstream,
-
- Of course! What do you think is the purpose of primary
- scientific journals? That's right, to forwarded new knowledge
- claims, claims which are not yet part of the mainstream.
-
- By your idiosyncratic criterion any new knowledge claims that
- challenge extant mainstream opinion is to be considered the
- opinions of a mere "crank". By this same criterion Einstein
- would have been called a "crank" when he published his paper on
- special relativity theory. This criterion of yours is a
- prescription for scientific ossification and the entrenchment
- of a rigid priesthood of "conventional wisdom".
-
-
- > and his evidence for supplementation's deleterious effects,
- >such as it is, is presently very tenuous. No one with any critical
- >faculties would accept his comments at face value.
-
- It is quite apparent that you are factually wrong because
- Professor Moon has successfully passed peer review of his paper
- in order to get it published in a respectable journal.
-
-
-
- >>As it turns out, arguments from authority do have validity if the
- >>authority is credible, and certainly such arguments carry more
- >>weight than the always fallacious `AD HOMINEM' arguments of the
- >>abusive variety (like name-calling Professor Moon as a
- "crank").
-
- >My goodness, you'd think that substantive points hadn't been addressed
- >as well in this tiresome exchange. Perhaps your failing memory is
- >early neurological evidence of B12 deficiency, Ted.
-
- Is this the best you can do? Mere insults and derisive remarks.
-
- >The point is, Ted, that Moon is a community of one on this issue.
-
- If you are referring to Moon's recommendations regarding the
- current practice of adding calciferol to the general food
- supply, then this is simply incorrect. Read my posting of Moon's
- conclusions where he clearly cites OTHER authorities sharing
- and supporting the warrantability of his conclusions.
-
- >The reason we should be cautious about accepting Moon's comments as
- >authoritative is precisely because they're out of step with tens, if
- >not hundreds of other "authorities".
-
- Again, you are not recognizing the role of scientific articles
- to forward new knowledge and the role of reportage to cite those
- articles for their intrinsic interest and possible relevance.
-
-
- >>>I have a masters degree in software engineering and a bachelor's in
- >>>biology, but I have 20 years of study in pharmacology, which has always
- >>>been an interest of mine.
- >>So, all you have is a BSc in biology. That hardly makes you an
- >>expert on "vitamin" D, and it certainly does not make you an
- >>accomplished expert like Professor Moon.
-
- >It means that I have the critical facilities to know when I should
- >trust an assertion from an "expert", and when to be skeptical.
-
- Does it? Then you should be able to evince that critical
- capacity of yours by making appeal to discursive argument and
- referenced fact rather than by resorting to vilifying Professor
- Moon as a "crank".
-
-
-
- >>Ok, so you've had a 20 year interest in pharmacology, but I take
- >>it that you don't actually have any degree of any kind in
- >>pharmacology? Is that right?
-
- >No degree. Three courses at Harvard Medical School, which I took out
- >of my own interest. So what?
-
- Indeed, so what? A mere 3 undergraduate courses at Harvard
- Medical School really does not make you an medical expert, nor
- an expert on vitamin D, nor does it even remotely compare with
- Professor Moon's credentials, yet you had the cheek to rudely
- belittle him as a mere "crank", even before you've read his
- article!
-
-
- >>Certainly, you don't have PhD as
- >>does Dr. Moon, nor do you have a teaching/research position at an
- >>university, nor have you published any papers in this area.
-
- This is irrelevant because I am not claiming to be a greater
- authority on calciferol than Dr. Moon. Apparently, you are by so
- slandering him as a "crank".
-
-
-
- ....
- >Ted, all of that doesn't mean that his opinions on this matter
- >mean beans if they're false, or delivered with some sort of
- >axe to grind,
-
- It seems to me that it is you who carries the hatchet. Why else
- this unprovoked vilification of an accredited professor and
- researcher as a "crank"?
-
-
-
- > something we should be quite suspicious of if
- >he blithely uses the phrase "anabolic steroid" when discussing
- >vitamin D with people like you and with other students and faculty at
- >the school (people who might not know what a crock that is), yet
- >he omits this phrase in his paper because it's simply incorrect.
-
- He omits this phrase because the usage of this term is not
- univocal. Admittedly, endocrinologists use the term more
- restrictively than do biochemistist and toxicologists. But that
- by itself doesn't legislate against am expanded usage by a competent
- authority like Dr. Moon.
-
-
-
- >>Look, I don't intend to belittle or demean your background, but
-
- >Snort.
-
- Your choice.
-
-
-
- >>really, a little HUMILITY is in order before you go around
- >>calling just anybody a "crank"
-
- >Chortle.
-
- Have it your way.
-
-
-
- >>and putting down readers on the
- >>net for simply and sincerely reporting what they have read from
- >>accomplished researchers publishing in respectable journals.
-
- >Ted, you deserve every putdown you've worked so hard for.
- >You're ignorant of what you purport to push, and when you
- >you are challenged, hipdeep as you are in rote regurgitation,
- >you resort to self-serving histrionics. Your time would be
- >better spent learning a little about nutrition and human
- >metabolism, and less retyping of meaningless excerpts from
- >textbooks. Try READING instead of transcribing. Take a
- >few biology courses first, however.
-
- Again, you here have only resorted to mere insults and thereby
- evinced a sorry absence of discursive argument and referenced
- fact. You seem to expect us to genuflect to your self-proclaimed
- authority but what kind of authority is this that would beat down
- those he would disagree with by mere insults and derisive
- belittling? Forsooth, you should know better ;-)
-
-
-