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Date: | Thu, 22 Oct 2015 16:57:07 -0400 |
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> But now we have many
> years of experience which
> should clearly show any
> direct link between measureable
> exposure to the products and
> subsequent colony health.
I disagree.
Firmly.
So do those who are publishing new work on this subject, such as the paper I
mentioned that seems to have touched a nerve:
"Neonicotinoid pesticides severely affect honey bee queens"
http://nature.com/articles/srep14621
> This is not a result of belief systems
> or taking positions--the finding is the
> result of good scientific studies.
> May I suggest that we stick to such analyses?
The problem is that anyone pointing to such a "good" study, even one
published by the prestigious "Nature" journals, can catch quite a bit of
flack simply because that study contradicts the pre-conceived worldview of
several of the more prolific posters to Bee-L.
Regardless of how one wishes to rationalize their beliefs, we are forced to
sum up our knowledge as a "belief" or "worldview". Otherwise, I'd have to
start every morning with "I think therefore I am.", and it would take me at
least until lunchtime to derive my way up to vector calculus and tensors so
I could then get some actual work done.
I guess the most basic difference here is that do not judge a study by the
outcome.
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