Drop That Sound
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soyshi
Yes.Allowed?
Is Paul Offit's position on boosters a "great exception"? Should he have his license revoked because he disagrees with the "consensus"?The cases where this does not reduce to systematic error or deliberate bias are the great exception.
Since I was talking about science, I do not see a testable hypothesis in an opinion piece about a nonscientist published in a newspaper. So, not in category.Is Paul Offit's position on boosters a "great exception"? Should he have his license revoked because he disagrees with the "consensus"?
Paul Offit, Philly’s most vocal vaccine advocate, on science, truth, and why he’s not a fan of the latest COVID boosters
Paul Offit says he is standing up for science, but was in the minority on the FDA panel of scientists who recommended the bivalent COVID vaccine now being offered across the nation.www.inquirer.com
Paul Offit is a "nonscientist"? He is Director of the Vaccine Education Center and an attending physician in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, is an FDA vaccine advisory committee member, and has published over 160 papers in medical and scientific journals in the areas of rotavirus-specific immune responses and vaccine safety.Since I was talking about science, I do not see a testable hypothesis in an opinion piece about a nonscientist published in a newspaper. So, not in category.
When some science gets published (in the appropriate places) that lies outside of consensus, the thing to do is test it andor wait for others to test it and examine their results. At that point, what I posted comes into play. True lateral advances in science, ones that stand up to extended test, are distinctly uncommon.
He is an MD. Doctors are practitioners of a discipline. They partner with scientists for things like clinical trials that require science. I believe I laid this out earlier. I am not sure why you are aggressively employing fallacy. In this instance, appeal to authority.Paul Offit is a "nonscientist"? He is of the Vaccine Education Center and an attending physician in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, is an FDA vaccine advisory committee member, and has published over 160 papers in medical and scientific journals in the areas of rotavirus-specific immune responses and vaccine safety.
Paul A. Offit, MD
Paul A. Offit, MD, is the Director of the Vaccine Education Center and an attending physician in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.www.chop.edu
So the fact that he's written articles in scientific journals doesn't make him a "scientist"? I'm curious what definition of "scientist" you are operating under, because a quick google search comes up with this, which would indeed confirm Dr Offit as a scientist.He is an MD. Doctors are practitioners of a discipline. They partner with scientists for things like clinical trials that require science. I believe I laid this out earlier. I am not sure why you are aggressively employing fallacy. In this instance, appeal to authority.
It's so weird that Google seems to think he's a scientist but you don't.He is an MD. Doctors are practitioners of a discipline. They partner with scientists for things like clinical trials that require science. I believe I laid this out earlier. I am not sure why you are aggressively employing fallacy. In this instance, appeal to authority.
Tell me then of his Ph. D. work and his papers in journals of science, not medicine.
The new law you cited would not apply to Paul Offit. The law is very specific; According to the statute, disinformation is misinformation that is “deliberately disseminated [by a physician or surgeon] with malicious intent or an intent to mislead.”
Misinformation is defined in the legislation as “false information that is contradicted by contemporary scientific consensus contrary to the standard of care.”The new law you cited would not apply to Paul Offit. The law is very specific; According to the statute, disinformation is misinformation that is “deliberately disseminated [by a physician or surgeon] with malicious intent or an intent to mislead.”
It wouldn't apply to Offit because it's a California law, and he practices in Philadelphia.The new law you cited would not apply to Paul Offit. The law is very specific; According to the statute, disinformation is misinformation that is “deliberately disseminated [by a physician or surgeon] with malicious intent or an intent to mislead.”
Right, that's what I said previously.Misinformation is defined in the legislation as “false information that is contradicted by contemporary scientific consensus contrary to the standard of care.”
It's not a game of gotcha. You decided that a scientist was a "nonscientist", simply because you'd rather not debate the core concern. It's one of your classic topic-avoidance tactics, of which you use all too often.I tire of your game of gotcha.
Tell me then of his Ph. D. work and his papers in journals of science, not medicine.
I'm fairly certain that medicine is a science.Tell me then of his Ph. D. work and his papers in journals of science, not medicine.
But it's not what you said previously. You left out an important detail from my understanding;Right, that's what I said previously.
I'm fairly certain that under that pretense anything "contradicted by contemporary scientific consensus" would be considered "false information", as "contemporary scientific consensus" (whatever that even means) effectively defines what is considered true or false. Back in early 2021 when I was saying that the vaccines did not stop transmission of covid, that would have been considered "false information", but now less than two years later, we know that it is indeed true.But it's not what you said previously. You left out an important detail from my understanding;
You wrote [ In California a law was just passed which doesn't allow doctors to give any covid advice to patients which is outside of "contemporary scientific consensus" ]
vs
(4) “Misinformation” means false information that is contradicted by contemporary scientific consensus contrary to the standard of care.
No.Is Paul Offit's position on boosters a "great exception"? Should he have his license revoked because he disagrees with the "consensus"?
Paul Offit, Philly’s most vocal vaccine advocate, on science, truth, and why he’s not a fan of the latest COVID boosters
Paul Offit says he is standing up for science, but was in the minority on the FDA panel of scientists who recommended the bivalent COVID vaccine now being offered across the nation.www.inquirer.com
It's not a game of gotcha. You decided that a scientist was a "nonscientist", simply because you'd rather not debate the core concern. It's one of your classic topic-avoidance tactics, of which you use all too often.