So I’m not sure why you’re thinking of the expert consensus here as saying a different thing.
As far as I can tell, I didn’t directly assert that expert consensus disagreed with Elizabeth in this thread. Indeed I mentioned that I “didn’t really” want to make claims about that. I only brought up expert consensus to reply to a narrow question that you asked about what we should rely on as a best guess. I didn’t mention expert consensus in any of my comments prior to that one, at least in this thread.
My primary point in this thread was to talk about the unreliability of self-reported data and the pitfalls of relying on it. Secondarily, I commented that most of the people she’s critiquing in this post don’t seem obviously guilty of the allegation in the title. I think it’s important to push back against accusations that a bunch of people (or in this case, a whole sub-community) is “not truthseeking” on the basis of weak evidence. And my general reply here is that if indeed vegan diets are generally healthy as long as one takes the standard precautions, then I think it is reasonable for others to complain about someone emphasizing health tradeoffs excessively (which is what I interpreted many of the quoted people in the post as doing).
(At the very least, if you think these people are being unreasonable, I would maintain that the sweeping accusation in the title requires stronger evidence than what was presented. I am putting this in parentheses though to emphasize that this is not my main point.)
Also, I think it’s possible that Elizabeth doesn’t agree with the scientific consensus, or thinks it’s at least slightly wrong. I don’t want to put words in her mouth, though. Partly I think the scientific consensus is important to mention at some point because I don’t fully know what she believes, and I think that bringing up expert consensus is a good way to ground our discussion and make our premises more transparent. However, if she agrees with the consensus, then I’m still OK saying what I said, because I think almost all of it stands or falls independently of whether she agrees with the consensus.
But it feels from your phrasing like there’s something else going on, or the thread is overall getting into a cycle of arguing-for-the-sake-of-arguing, or something.
That’s possible too. I do think I might be getting too deep into this over what is mostly a few pointless quibbles about what type of data is reliable and what isn’t. You’re right to raise the possibility that things are going off the rails in an unintended way.
As far as I can tell, I didn’t directly assert that expert consensus disagreed with Elizabeth in this thread. Indeed I mentioned that I “didn’t really” want to make claims about that. I only brought up expert consensus to reply to a narrow question that you asked about what we should rely on as a best guess. I didn’t mention expert consensus in any of my comments prior to that one, at least in this thread.
My primary point in this thread was to talk about the unreliability of self-reported data and the pitfalls of relying on it. Secondarily, I commented that most of the people she’s critiquing in this post don’t seem obviously guilty of the allegation in the title. I think it’s important to push back against accusations that a bunch of people (or in this case, a whole sub-community) is “not truthseeking” on the basis of weak evidence. And my general reply here is that if indeed vegan diets are generally healthy as long as one takes the standard precautions, then I think it is reasonable for others to complain about someone emphasizing health tradeoffs excessively (which is what I interpreted many of the quoted people in the post as doing).
(At the very least, if you think these people are being unreasonable, I would maintain that the sweeping accusation in the title requires stronger evidence than what was presented. I am putting this in parentheses though to emphasize that this is not my main point.)
Also, I think it’s possible that Elizabeth doesn’t agree with the scientific consensus, or thinks it’s at least slightly wrong. I don’t want to put words in her mouth, though. Partly I think the scientific consensus is important to mention at some point because I don’t fully know what she believes, and I think that bringing up expert consensus is a good way to ground our discussion and make our premises more transparent. However, if she agrees with the consensus, then I’m still OK saying what I said, because I think almost all of it stands or falls independently of whether she agrees with the consensus.
That’s possible too. I do think I might be getting too deep into this over what is mostly a few pointless quibbles about what type of data is reliable and what isn’t. You’re right to raise the possibility that things are going off the rails in an unintended way.