This thread is the ultimate troll job. Bravo lead belly. This is a work of art...
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When less than than .01 of 1% of the US cities are experiencing this kind of turmoil, I think it's you who is manipulated into the mass hysteria that the US on fire or under chaos. There is just no truth to that narrative. A certain political ideology wanted to gain your vote and targeted people, like yourself, that lack the knowledge and education to breakdown the reality into what it actually is. You are just another victim of the gaslighting and fear-mongering. Fortunately, it doesn't appear to be working to the level they aspired to.
I had to skim through the paper just to verify my suspicions and they were correct. All you did was mimic his own commentary about the data in his paper. I wouldn't call that a critique. I doubt you have the statistical background to truly provide insight into the validity and shortcomings of what he is doing.Yea, they were really good and well applied for coming up with the data that was able to be derived.
This data set is less likely to be biased by police reporting practices, because it relied less on the FBI’s Supplemental Homicide Reports that were constructed from self-reported cases of police-involved homicide. Another benefit is the multi level modeling. It is also built off the most updated data sets available.
I am not familiar of any real negatives. Heterogeneity in encounter rates between suspects and police as a function of race could play a strong role in the racial biases in shooting rates presented, and it would be nice to see this study replicated using varying metbods instead of the bayesian method.
Now what's yours?
I gave you my analysis. I can't help it if you weren't prepared to handle that.I had to skim through the paper just to verify my suspicions and they were correct. All you did was mimic his own commentary about the data in his paper. I wouldn't call that a critique. I doubt you have the statistical background to truly provide insight into the validity and shortcomings of what he is doing.
That wasn't really my original point now was it?I gave you my analysis. I can't help it if you weren't prepared to handle that.
I gave you a pretty logic explanation of a few pluses and minuses. I don't know what else you wan't. If you researched into it, you will see he is pretty qualified to and well-respected. Many of his peers seem supportive of his reasarch and conclusions. And he hasn't been suspended by his research institution for immoral behavior.
It appears it was. What would you say your original point was?That wasn't really my original point now was it?
The original point was that someone who does not have a strong math and statistics background can't really evaluate whether or not a study has fatal flaws. In other words, there are studies that contradict each other. I'm not going to read each of them and try to determine which study is better because, while I work with numbers every day, I'm not an expert in statistical modeling and can't do an adequate job of determining the quality of someone's study. That would be true of the vast majority of people, including you.It appears it was. What would you say your original point was?
I agree! I think you likely aren't qualified to and wouldn't have an adequate understanding of the data or modeling to be able to reach any reasonable conclusion. That, however, does not make it true of others.The original point was that someone who does not have a strong math and statistics background can't really evaluate whether or not a study has fatal flaws. In other words, there are studies that contradict each other. I'm not going to read each of them and try to determine which study is better because, while I work with numbers every day, I'm not an expert in statistical modeling and can't do an adequate job of determining the quality of someone's study. That would be true of the vast majority of people, including you.
It makes it true of anyone who doesn't have a strong background in statistical modeling, which is the vast majority of people. From our conversation, it is clear you don't have the math skills to evaluate such studies. That's why I ask for your critique. It was clear from your answer that you didn't evaluate the modeling from someone with a math background. You simply read the paper and tried to reword and embellish some of the comments the author made. I do a little statistical modeling, but it is very basic stuff. My math skills are stronger than most people's, but I wouldn't feel qualified to judge the validity of sophisticated modeling techniques, and the vast majority of people aren't qualified to judge that either. That's why it is important to be able to think for yourself. Studies like those can be biased and performed to get the answer they want. It would be hard for a lay person to tell the difference between a study designed to get a specific answer and a well designed study trying to find the truth.I agree! I think you likely aren't qualified to and wouldn't have an adequate understanding of the data or modeling to be able to reach any reasonable conclusion. That, however, does not make it true of others.
You simply stating conjecture doesn't make it true. I think it's far more evident you got an answer you didn't expect and could to refute, so the ad hominem fallacy has been utilized in an effort to negate that.It makes it true of anyone who doesn't have a strong background in statistical modeling, which is the vast majority of people. From our conversation, it is clear you don't have the math skills to evaluate such studies. That's why I ask for your critique. It was clear from your answer that you didn't evaluate the modeling from someone with a math background. You simply read the paper and tried to reword and embellish some of the comments the author made. I do a little statistical modeling, but it is very basic stuff. My math skills are stronger than most people's, but I wouldn't feel qualified to judge the validity of sophisticated modeling techniques, and the vast majority of people aren't qualified to judge that either. That's why it is important to be able to think for yourself. Studies like those can be biased and performed to get the answer they want. It would be hard for a lay person to tell the difference between a study designed to get a specific answer and a well designed study trying to find the truth.
seems like that should be super relevant here.
I think you are reading what you want into my comments. I have never said his study is not valid, nor have I said other studies are or are not valid. So your assumption is pretty off base. Maybe you're not an English major after all. All I have said is that I'm not qualified to judge any sophisticated statistical modeling so I don't try to do that. If you want to put that much stock in his study, you are welcome to do so.You simply stating conjecture doesn't make it true. I think it's far more evident you got an answer you didn't expect and could to refute, so the ad hominem fallacy has been utilized in an effort to negate that.
I think I will trust the wide array of experts that agree with his assessment. We are talking about someone with far more of a background in research, analytics, application, theories and modeling structures and techniques than anyone on here will learn from Google.
Not at all. I am just restating your words and statements.I think you are reading what you want into my comments. I have never said his study is not valid, nor have I said other studies are or are not valid. So your assumption is pretty off base. Maybe you're not an English major after all. All I have said is that I'm not qualified to judge any sophisticated statistical modeling so I don't try to do that. If you want to put that much stock in his study, you are welcome to do so.
It would be very easy to prove systemic racism were it real. If a competent scientist wanted to, he could take data from the 1950s and definitively show the effects of systemic racism in all manner of interactions because it was real. He could easily prove the correlation as causal in nature without speculation and it could be done by real scientists, no social epidemiologists required.
These weak studies you link are failed and flawed logic due to motivated reasoning, done exclusively by political scientists or anthropologists or sociologists or other lesser academics, and never done by hard scientists to reach the grossly misleading claims that they do in the media.
This is because they cannot actually falsify the null hypothesis; their conclusions are not predicated on data, but upon data misuse. They only ever prove that which they set out to prove because the core logical flaw, namely the circular reasoning, is already baked into the cake.
All hard scientists understand this, why they let this farce continue in $academia$ is anyone's guess, no conspiracy theory needed, just true scientific rigor will show you cannot make the claims you make.
And that doesn't even make them not true, just that you couldn't prove it true. The distortion in the media costs lives, sows hatred and discord, and that can easily be proven true... it's no $joke$
A Response to Steven Durlauf and James Heckman Roland G. Fryer, Jr. Harvard University July 4, 2020 Science makes progress with rational debate, disagreement, and discussion. In that vein, I am grateful to the authors of the comment, Steven Durlauf and James Heckman, for engaging in one of the most important social issues of our time.
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-- we went through painstaking effort to belabor what our analysis can and cannot teach us about race and policing.
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I fear the authors did not read the paper carefully.
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Importantly, our statistical methods are not new. Our way of describing racial disparities in outcomes is no different than the vast literature in economics spanning more than 70 years describing racial disparities on outcomes such as test scores, health, and wages. Neal and Johnson (1996) is a good example. Ironically, incommenting on that paper, which uses similar methods, Heckman (1998) remarked, “Their findings are important for interpreting the sources of black-white disparity in labor market outcomes.”
You use a whole lot of words to cover up the fact that the entire basis of your argument is "nuh uh!" You failed to ever one actually refute what you're arguing against. You just attempt to discredit "soft science" as you call it as inherently untrustworthy, make a whole bunch of general statements, and don't actually address any of the specifics of the linked study. You're like so many of these debate bros - all rhetoric, zero substance.