Don't be stupid. It was to limit the discussion, otherwise I would have to repeat the whole long post with more text again and again.Something which would be tedious for all.Darth Wong wrote:You are saying that HE is wrong, therefore you have to show where he's gone wrong, and you don't even know how he arrived at his conclusions yet. It's only an excerpt, so screeching about the lack of documentation is just childish, and saying that I have to show why YOU are wrong for saying that HE is wrong is just sad.Spoonist wrote:Care to point out the specific points where I'm wrong instead of a generic rejection? Or which parts where you think that the author is actually right?
Since my problem was with his claims in the article being overly speculative to get more attention I don't see how I could otherwise present it?Darth Wong wrote:The Appeal to Motive fallacy does not become any less of a fallacy with repetition,Spoonist wrote:Its this baseless speculative reasoning made for getting more attention and getting more interest that I disagree with.
Example of speculative reasoning to get attention:
-Factoid: Global warming is predicted to make sealevels rise.
-Article title: Florida will drown in the next 20 years.
-Factoid: Earth has during its history been hit by several asteroids with devestating effect and will probably be hit again.
-Article title: A planet killer asteroid is on its way to collide with earth.
The article titles is bad science regardless if the factoid the article is based upon is true or not. This is a common distortion of science made in the media which I personally hate.
In this particular case the bad science article is actually written by the author of the paper, but that does not make the article less offensive or less filled with bad science, regardless of whether the study/research behind it is true or not. Articles has to be internally consistent.
Questions so that I understand your position:
Would your arguments be different if it did not claim to be an excerpt?
Would your arguments be different if this article had been written by someone else then the author of the study?
Do you disagree that the author has "spiced up" the article to make it more sellable?