DFK! wrote:
Now, if you want to argue that the science of medicine, epidemiology, biology, psychology, and public health cannot or shouldn't be extended to labor study, that's fine, but that is a separate argument.
Thanks, I appreciate a good laugh...
But seriously - you claimed "extension of the hierarchy of evidence to labor studies" is "the generally-accepted hierarchy". You brought it into the discussion and now you think it's better as a separate argument?
Not gunna happen. I mean, it's not going to happen without being challenged, but ...
I still have a bigger problem with your whole "hierarchy of evidence" tack....
How do you propose we use "hierarchy of evidence"? A hierarchy is used to rank related items... How does one go about ranking data about "employer" versus data about "age and experience"? There's no conflict between them to apply a hierarchy to select one over the other. If statistical analysis showed government employees didn't have greater age and experience and the spokesperson said they did, well, then you might have a point, but that's not the case.
I'd sure like your explanation on why I shouldn't think you just want to arbitrarily throw out evidence that weakens your argument.