RE: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy?

2004-12-03 Thread Yogiboy
...@starband.net] Sent: Friday, December 03, 2004 3:49 PM To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy? Yogiboy wrote: >Not all motivation is due to money is something which I have to agree >with. >I think it is important to find out what the &q

Re: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy?

2004-12-03 Thread Jim Holmes
Yogiboy wrote: Not all motivation is due to money is something which I have to agree with. I think it is important to find out what the "intention" is behind the motivation. If it is honest and sincere with emphasis on helping others more then themselves ( selfless service ) with money being a p

RE: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy?

2004-12-03 Thread Yogiboy
Not all motivation is due to money is something which I have to agree with. I think it is important to find out what the "intention" is behind the motivation. If it is honest and sincere with emphasis on helping others more then themselves ( selfless service ) with money being a partial reward; The

Re: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy?

2004-12-03 Thread Dan Nave
motivation. "The road to hell is paved with good intentions." Dan Just my opinion. Re: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy? From: Garnet wrote: Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2004 17:53:47 FOLLOW THE MONEY Garnet -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Col

Re: CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy?

2004-12-02 Thread Garnet
As I have often said, show me the RAW data. Peer reviewed is one step closer than non-peer reviewed, but there is nothing like raw data. Of course NO ONE publishes raw data, it is always statistically manipulated and often with misapplications of statistical tests. Generally parametrics that are n

CS>Peer reviewed studies: Always trustworthy?

2004-11-30 Thread Ken & Nancy Bagwell
This article is scary, but not out of line with so much of what we already know. I wouldn't be so quick to trust what medical journals say. http://www.cbc.ca/consumers/market/files/health/ghostwriting/ "Medical ghostwriting can be as scary as it is spooky. People with scientific backgrounds —ofte