While I pretty much agree with the quote, it doesn’t provide anyone that isn’t already convinced with many good reasons to believe it. Less of an unusually rational statement and more of an empiricist applause light, in other words.
In any case, a scientific conclusion needn’t be inherently offensive for closer examination to be recommended: if most researchers’ backgrounds are likely to introduce implicit biases toward certain conclusions on certain topics, then taking a close look at the experimental structure to rule out such bias isn’t merely a good political sop but is actually good science in its own right. Of course, dealing with this properly would involve hard work and numbers and wouldn’t involve decrying all but the worst studies as bad science when you’ve read no more than the abstract.
if most researchers’ backgrounds are likely to introduce implicit biases toward certain conclusions on certain topics, then taking a close look at the experimental structure to rule out such bias isn’t merely a good political sop but is actually good science in its own right.
Unfortunately, since the people deciding which papers to take a closer look at tend to have the same biases as most scientists, the papers that actually get examined closely are the ones going against common biases.
I hate to find myself in the position of playing apologist for this mentality, but I believe the party line is that most of the relevant biases are instilled by mass culture and present at some level even in most people trying to combat them, never mind scientists who oppose them in a kind of vague way but mostly have better things to do with their lives.
In light of the Implicit Association Test this doesn’t even seem all that far-fetched to me. The question is to what extent it warrants being paranoid about experimental design, and that’s where I find myself begging to differ.
While I pretty much agree with the quote, it doesn’t provide anyone that isn’t already convinced with many good reasons to believe it. Less of an unusually rational statement and more of an empiricist applause light, in other words.
In any case, a scientific conclusion needn’t be inherently offensive for closer examination to be recommended: if most researchers’ backgrounds are likely to introduce implicit biases toward certain conclusions on certain topics, then taking a close look at the experimental structure to rule out such bias isn’t merely a good political sop but is actually good science in its own right. Of course, dealing with this properly would involve hard work and numbers and wouldn’t involve decrying all but the worst studies as bad science when you’ve read no more than the abstract.
Unfortunately, since the people deciding which papers to take a closer look at tend to have the same biases as most scientists, the papers that actually get examined closely are the ones going against common biases.
I hate to find myself in the position of playing apologist for this mentality, but I believe the party line is that most of the relevant biases are instilled by mass culture and present at some level even in most people trying to combat them, never mind scientists who oppose them in a kind of vague way but mostly have better things to do with their lives.
In light of the Implicit Association Test this doesn’t even seem all that far-fetched to me. The question is to what extent it warrants being paranoid about experimental design, and that’s where I find myself begging to differ.