If your view is merely that there is a "camp" of experts that disagrees, then sure, but in that case, I do not think it is honest to frame this as a choice between believing in the authority of a single expert from that camp, vs. the (lack of) authority of me, a non-expert.
(I also think your read of the evidence is wrong, but I won't restate the arguments in my article.)
Also, I didn't say anything about the evidence (I don't have a "read" on the evidence, because I don't read Alz literature). My point is entirely that my priors indicate that Derek is a more reliable reader than you.
>I don't have a "read" on the evidence, because I don't read Alz literature
these two sentences seem contradictory to me. i am not sure how you would keep up on the research (to know it's moved from majority-held to minority-held view), and know that the move is not reflected in the literature, without reading the literature.
The raw literature for alzheimer's, as well as biomed in general, is not really easily interpretable. It's rife with errors, misleading statements, and intentional obfuscation.
Why do you continue to frame this as a choice between a single cherry-picked expert's opinion, and my own non-expert opinion? Either fairly represent the spectrum of experts' views, or decide based on the actual evidence and arguments.
I've seen this happen before, btw- overturning establishment paradigms, especially ones where the underlying etiology is complex- is extremely hard and often takes decades of experimental results.
Arguing from authority really only takes you so far when it ends up as an appeal to your personal experience. I'd rather you either address the arguments directly, or drop the dubious appeal to authority.
When the first drugs targeting HIV arrived the results were undeniable. Yes the drugs sucked for various reasons and yes HIV would evolve resistance. But the data demonstrated a very clear link that these drugs suppressed HIV and suppressing HIV made people live longer. Or consider mRNA and COVID, a great success story where the technology was put to good use and the results are obvious.
On the flip side we have certain cancers like certain breast cancers, melanoma, etc that never had a "wow" moment where some miracle turned them from highly fatal into treatable but we have seen decade after decade treatments improve and survival rates march ever upward such that what were once almost guaranteed death sentences are now often very treatable.
These are two disease treatment models worth keeping in mind. Sometimes major leaps are made. Sometimes progress is slow.
Now if we consider amyloid beta therapies: we have treatments that target amyloid beta with varying degrees of success but at least some show definite reductions in amyloid beta plaques. To the best of my knowledge that has not shown to improve outcomes in Alzheimer's patients to any meaningful degree.
That concerns me and I think justifies some skepticism of the amyloid hypothesis. The data is messy but if amyloid beta were a symptom not a cause that could certainly fit the results we are seeing. That doesn't mean the amyloid beta hypothesis is wrong but I think skepticism of the "state of the art" in the field is warranted given the pathetically ineffective progress made to date.
Is putting your thumb on the scale against Lowe. When a few replies down from here some commenters have provided an article demonstrating the exact fraudulent science in favor of what Lowe is saying.[0] It seems you may very well be disrupting it because he has a minority opinion. So you’ve possibly spent 6 months understanding an incorrect and fraud supported thesis. That seems like an outsider trying to disrupt it by using their “Google/SpaceX” creds to claim authority on the work of insiders.
2. I would never want anyone to believe what I say because of "Google/SpaceX creds" (I didn't even write that line, Scott added it, and only to provide a brief biography and acknowledge that I do not work in the field, not to lend an air of authority to my words).
3. There's no need to cite the fraud to me, since I already discuss it in my article. You are welcome to read that article and form your own opinion about the arguments therein.