LimberLarry comments on This is why we can't have social science - Less Wrong
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The number of confounding factors isn't that important if it's possible to do controlled experiments that control for them. Nutrition science has the problem that you usually can't do good controlled experiments or those are very expensive.
Obviously if you can control for a confounding factor then its not an issue, I was simply stressing that the nature of human sciences means that it is effectively impossible to control for all confounding factors, or even be aware of many of them.
To the extend that's true careful replication of studies to identify factors is important if you don't want to practice what Feymann described as Cargo Cult science. If you follow Feymann argument physicists also would get a bunch of bad results if they would work with the scientific standards used in psychology.
Feymann on rat psychology:
Nutrition is really a different case than a lot of psychology. There are question in psychology such as whether doing certain things to a child in it's childhood effect whether that child is a healthy adult. Those questions are hard to investigate scientifically because of time lag. The same isn't true for many psychology experiments.
I don't think we actually disagree on anything, the only point I was making was that your reply to Lightwave, while accurate, wasn't actually replying to the point he made.
I did reply to his point. He spoke about nutrition science. That field has it's own problems that psychologists don't have to deal with. It's a bad example if he wanted to make the point you think he wanted to make.
Well fair enough. His use of nutrition science as an example was probably poorly chosen.