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http://www.garytaubes.com/2011/09/catching-up-on-lost-time-ancestral-health-symposium-food-reward-palatability-insulin-signaling-carbohydrates-kettles-pots-other-odds-ends-part-i/

Now for the punch line to my shaggy dog story – i.e. iconic moment number one. In the Q&A session following my hour-long presentation, a member of the PBRC faculty, a distinguished-looking gentleman who I’d guess was in his mid to late sixties, raised his hand and said, “Mr. Taubes, is it fair to say that one subtext of your talk is that you think we are all idiots?”

Is it fair to say that I think they are all idiots? A surprisingly good question.

Certainly one subtext of my talk (and my work) is that a journalist is getting it right and sixty-odd years of nutritionists and obesity researchers got it wrong (with maybe a half dozen exceptions who were marginalized for their beliefs.) So, yes, it was fair to say that I think a large body of otherwise very smart people, Ph.D.s and M.D.s all, were operating with suboptimal intelligence. Certainly in a pursuit — science — in which the one goal is to get the right answer, getting the wrong answer on such a huge and tragic scale borders on inexcusable.

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Melissa, would you mind re-editing the title again, and this time at least pretending that you don't dislike Taubes? :-) – kilton Sep 2 2011 at 18:56
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A <i>"surprisingly</i> good question? As opposed to a good question from a source one shouldn't be surprised to receive such a question from? Operating with suboptimal intelligence. {{{CRINGE}}} Oh lordy help us if science needs Taubes to fix it! -- ducking and running and not looking back as my reputation here heads back to negative territory ;-) – Evelyn aka CarbSane Sep 2 2011 at 19:05
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Bulletin: CarbSane still hasn't matured yet. Maybe next month. :) – Archie Sep 2 2011 at 19:10
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That title change was tame compared to the tweets. Why the vitriol? We have plenty of "have you seen" questions that you haven't bothered to modify: google.com/… It's a pretty transparent tactic. – Ambimorph Sep 2 2011 at 22:52
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In fact you completely modified the question to quote a section that you find most relevant to your view. paleohacks.com/revisions/62377/list If I were the poster, I'd feel you abused your moderation power. – Ambimorph Sep 2 2011 at 22:57
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11 Answers

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I'll respond to the question posed in this thread's newly edited title: "Can Gary Taubes fix science? Does it need to be fixed?"

Science -- or rather, the accumulation of knowledge we call "science" -- always needs critiquing. The idea that the pursuit and understanding of scientific knowledge should be left only to those who bear certain credentials is anathema to the very foundations of the scientific enterprise. Anybody can "fix" science, in the sense that anyone, regardless of their title or station in life, who can understand the language in which hypotheses are proposed, the mechanics of the experiments performed, and the logic of the subsequent analyses is ipso facto qualified to do so. To say otherwise is to hide all experiment and analysis under a shroud of professionally enforced secrecy, and to undermine the very transparency that makes science work in the first place.

You may agree with Taubes or disagree with him, but to shoot his arguments down on the basis of his arrogant upstartness, while politically expedient, is illogical from the point of view of the pursuit of knowledge. What ought to matter in the game is the hypotheses themselves, the arguments and the predictions and the experiments and the analyses, not the identities or personalities of the players on the field.

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The thing is, with his Insulin Theory, he is not claiming to be a critic of science; he is claiming to be freakin’ Copernicus. (While not being “up to speed” on leptin.) It will be interesting to see if he actually engages in real debate or whether he will just say that his critics are using the wrong paradigm. – Paleo2.0 Sep 3 2011 at 0:34
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What people miss about all this is that it's not "his" theory -- he's reviewing the science that exists. When he did the research for GCBC, leptin research was in its utter infancy. It's now in its toddlerhood. And really, all these digs at his ego are as relevant as digs at his haircut. It's the predictions and explanations that matter, folks. – Rose Sep 3 2011 at 0:55
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As usual, an insightful, eloquent answer that doesn't get caught up in distractors, but cuts to the heart of it. – Ambimorph Sep 3 2011 at 1:20
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His research says that certain “carbs” are linked to obesity. "HIS" THEORY says that insulin -> obesity. Too bad he never bothered to look at a table of Insulin Index values (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin_index). Pasta (refined wheat) produces less insulin than beef or fish. White rice (eaten by billions) produces more insulin than pasta, breakfast cereal, potato chips, doughnuts, beef, and fish. WTF? Why are we even discussing Taubes and science in the same breath? Why don't we LOL when he compares himself to Copernicus? – Paleo2.0 Sep 3 2011 at 2:24
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At every Leptin receptor site there is also an insulin receptor. Check Lustig's presentation. i'd say there is a bit of a, erm, ah, relationship there.. – Atkins-witha-loincloth Sep 3 2011 at 3:12
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The question and quote above aren't a very good representation of the article. His point wasn't that thousands of scientists have been idiots, and therefore we need Sir Gary to ride up on his white horse and save us from them. The point was that it's human nature to work within the paradigms we believe, and that applies even to scientists who try to see things objectively. That's not just true in this area of obesity and nutrition either; read Inventing the AIDS Virus to learn (regardless of whether you buy his alternative AIDS theory) how many times in history medical scientists have latched onto incorrect theories of disease -- even in some cases after the disease had been cured in some way they had rejected. See also education, agriculture, or any other field where there are strong economic and social forces backing the status quo. When you learn, work, and live entirely in a particular world, you tend to accept that world's assumptions without even realizing it. And when those assumptions turn out to have been wrong, you can look like an idiot, no matter how smart and dedicated you are.

As Taubes says, that's why so often it's an outsider that presents the alternative theory that shakes things up. The outsider hasn't been steeped in the paradigm that the expert authorities have. Of course, as he also says, the outsiders are also almost always wrong, which is why the authorities get so impatient with them and reject them as cranks. But if you're going to find that diamond in the rough, that one outsider who's onto something important, you have to be willing to listen to them.

Taubes isn't saying here that he's right because he's the outsider. He's saying he's not automatically wrong because he's the outsider, which is a logical fallacy that always comes up -- as someone said above, let's see his PhD before we listen to him. In my opinion, he's saying that if you're going to invite him into the discussion, you should engage his ideas, not his degrees or time spent as an authority in the field.

A couple great quotes from Paul Graham:

The most valuable truths are the ones most people don't believe. They're like undervalued stocks. If you start with them, you'll have the whole field to yourself. So when you find an idea you know is good but most people disagree with, you should not merely ignore their objections, but push aggressively in that direction.

If you believe everything you're supposed to now, how can you be sure you wouldn't also have believed everything you were supposed to if you had grown up among the plantation owners of the pre-Civil War South, or in Germany in the 1930s -- or among the Mongols in 1200, for that matter? Odds are you would have.

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You have to be really skeptical though of people quoting Kuhn when talking about their own pet theories. That seems to up the crackpot quotient even higher. Such hubris tends to hamper honest science as well. I also think the role of the “outsider” is overemphasized. Copernicus wasn’t an outsider to the way astronomy was done at the time. Heisenberg and Einstein were not outsiders. In physics particularly, the motif is “young” rather than “outsider”. – Paleo2.0 Sep 3 2011 at 16:57
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He didn't quote Kuhn in support of his own "pet theory." He quoted him to show why it's okay to have a pet theory, and why it's also completely rational for the mainstream to reject the pet theories of outsiders. That's the thing: he never said science needs to be "fixed," or even that it can or should be fixed. The tendency to get locked into a paradigm and be unable to see outside it isn't a problem of science; it's a fact of life. It's why people say "think outside the box"; they know that's where the real 'gem' ideas tend to be hiding, but that's also where it's hardest to look. – Aaron B. Sep 3 2011 at 17:40
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But after that 'inexcusable' line, he spent several paragraphs excusing it, and explaining why it's natural and even inevitable. This is a guy whose book had to be edited by 50% just to make it ginormous-but-publishable. He wanders around the possibilities a lot before winding to a conclusion, so one line early in the article shouldn't be taken as his final argument. – Aaron B. Sep 3 2011 at 18:31
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Indeed Aaron. It's amazing what happens when you actually read something carefully without a negative bias. – kilton Sep 5 2011 at 18:30
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One last stab: the point is, if you say "this vast group of people can't understand this truth that I understand," it sounds like you're saying they're all stupid (incapable of understanding it) or corrupt (refusing to see it). But there's a third option: they can't see it because it violates assumptions they've grown up with and taken for granted for so long that they don't even realize they're assumptions. – Aaron B. Sep 6 2011 at 1:05
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Me, I certainly appreciate the energy Taubes is putting into dismantling the "eat less, move more" model of obesity. That said, I'm one of those who thinks that the fact that avoiding carbs helps some people with weight loss does NOT necessarily mean that Taubes' hypothesis (high carbs -> insulin ->fat storage) is the end-all be-all explanation for obesity (even now that he's got the caveat that fructose needs to be initially involved). And Taubes' comment in his Robb Wolf podcast that he wasn't up to speed on leptin? Hmmm.

IMO, Shift's Obesity System Influence Diagram illustrates that obesity is way more complicated than either Taubes' or Guyenet's hypotheses accounts for. But at least in Stephan's defense, he's not out there arguing that his does.

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"But at least in Stephan's defense, he's not out there arguing that his does."__Amen Beth! – Evelyn aka CarbSane Sep 2 2011 at 19:32
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http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2011/09/response-to-gary-taubes-framing-debate.html

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That's the last straw. I'm not going to watch a feud. I'm unsubscribing from both their blogs until this blows over. – smcdow Sep 3 2011 at 0:56
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lol I have the opposite reaction. I love it when guys fight! < / sicko > – Bread-Eating Beelzebub Sep 3 2011 at 0:57
Oye.........vey – Shari Bambino Sep 3 2011 at 1:21
(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ haha – Bread-Eating Beelzebub Sep 3 2011 at 2:26
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The bottom line is: THIS IS SCIENCE. And it is nothing new. It goes on all the time - competing theories and research. WE want science to yield "THE answers." Science does not yield "THE answers." It yields very useful information that is as good as it gets for the time in which it is researched. And still, there will always be competing scientific views/theories. Given the current quagmire: imho they are all "right." Obesity is complex and multifactorial. They are all right and still, all of them leave out significant other factors. Knowledge grows...develops.... – Atkins-witha-loincloth Sep 3 2011 at 3:18
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The discourse is great and I look forward to more of it.

I think that eventually the science will be vetted out and more congruent. I don't buy the argument about Taubes not being a scientist etc. I love Weston A. Price too and to quote The Hangover, "He's just a Dentist."

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it becomes quite funny if you think about, particularly if the person in question comes from a background that is stereotyped as being high-status. In Gary's case, he's "Just a rocket scientist" – Bread-Eating Beelzebub Sep 5 2011 at 17:09
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yes it is funny. Some of my favorite science booty comes from some quirky little physical anthropologist who wants to hunt and is refreshingly outspoken. – BaconHealsChic Sep 5 2011 at 17:53
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I'm looking forward to reading the series as I found GCBC insightful.

I personally don't think that all carbs are bad, or that all our "modern" health woes are caused by carbs, but I do think bad carbs (processed, sugar-filled, etc.) do play some role.

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While I'm a huge fan of Taubes, I think he should make an appointment with Dr. K. and bone up on the multi-faceted Quilt. Taubes even admitted recently what he "wasn't up to speed on leptin". Insulin and carbs aren't the only factors, and reward theory does have an influence whether he likes it or not.

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This is why GT is getting hammered......and I pointed it out to him. Until he realizes he is operating one small sphere of what obesity might be he is going to get pummeled. But SG could be in the same boat......but he is yet to write a book that will pigeon hole him to food reward. I doubt he is that narrow minded. The bigger picture is out there if they just take their rose colored macronutrient glasses off. – The Quilt Sep 3 2011 at 16:57
Long live the QUILT! :) – ricechek Sep 3 2011 at 19:54
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Let'em go at it. Nothing bad can come from it. We'll get to witness some great topics discussed and chewed over. I don't care for the personal attack aspect of it, if there is one, but I do enjoy the fleshing out of ideas and concepts.

Let's sit back and enjoy the ride. Chances are, we'll all gain something from this ongoing debate.

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Meh…He really didn’t say anything consequential.

He seems to be laying more of a groundwork for the argument that it really doesn’t matter what his critics say because there are two paradigms involved - it will all come down to the experiment he wants funded.

I read Kuhn twenty years ago, and imagine most scientists have as well. I don’t think the talk of paradigm shifts will sway real scientists as much as it does the general public.

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Maybe you know more scientists than I do, but my background is Philosophy, and I am pretty sure most scientists don't care two figs about the Philosophy of science. – karlub Sep 6 2011 at 22:06
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I like shift's diagram but it is really too complex for the average person to use.

Gary Taubes is interesting and there are many people who would say that Fructose is a dose dependent hepatoxin (Lustig, Lalonde,etc.) Do I or many of them think its the only answer? Most people would say it is much more complex than one factor and we are going to have to have a slightly more nuanced answer than avoid fructose.

Even though they are feuding, both sides want to fund studies and prove themselves right. At the end of the day, there is not much money funded research in consumption of whole food so we do not see mainstream academic departments working on this.

Disagreements are good as long as people are willing to test their guesses and move forward.

I think Fenyman put it best how science should evolve in The Character of Physical Law which Taubes cited

In general we look for a new law by the following process. First we guess it. Then we compute the consequences of the guess to see what would be implied if this law that we guessed is right. Then we compare the result of the computation to nature, with experiment or experience, compare it directly with observation, to see if it works. If it disagrees with experiment it is wrong. In that simple statement is the key to science. It does not make any difference how beautiful your guess is. It does not make any difference how smart you are, who made the guess, or what his name is – if it disagrees with experiment it is wrong. That is all there is to it.

it.

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No and no.

Taubes rode in on Atkin's horse. He's contributed nothing original. His kind of research is sophomore level lit searches followed by freshman level analysis. No lab work, just a lot of sensational hot air.

In short he's a journalist sold by the word. His contribution to science is on the same level with Ron Hubbard.

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I would say, although I love bio-chemists that he reaches a wider range of people that are inaccessible to our bio-chemist bloggers. He opens the door for people to even find paleo. – BaconHealsChic Sep 3 2011 at 3:10
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When Gary Taubes earns a PHD proving his pet theory I'll pay attention. If he spends his book royalties endowing a chair in nutrition he earns my respect. But right now the money is only feeding his ego. – thhq Sep 3 2011 at 3:45
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I dont think a degree means shit and I have three of them. When you think a degree means something your brain has shrunk in my view. – The Quilt Sep 3 2011 at 17:29
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Jack you missed thhq's point (and was the brain shrinking comment necessary?). Doing the kind of research and presenting the information in a manner that will pass muster of critical review to earn that degree is different from Gary hiring researchers to go out and bring him back papers he's admittedly only skimmed most of the time who then relies on interviews with scientists about their often decades old research. One can imagine an interview of Einstein by Taubes: "Anything new since you came up with your theory of relativity?" No? OK then ... that settles that. This is not research. – Evelyn aka CarbSane Sep 3 2011 at 18:18
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Well I certainly didn't expect any upvotes for what I said. Maybe 34 years of being a research scientist has shriveled my brain. But I have had the satisfaction of seeing a lot of arrogant gasbags get what they so richly deserved. While they prattled about the importance of their discoveries I tried to develop better communication skills (saying what you mean clearly and succinctly) and giving others credit. As a researcher I wouldn't want to tie the paleo concept to a nutball journalist that thinks he's Copernicus. The concept needs more Framingham. More open minds. Less science fiction. – thhq Sep 5 2011 at 18:58
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