PoppingTom
TEH BRAIN
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2010
- Posts
- 7,922
I don't know what Kinsey's agenda in sexuality was either. What I know is that his work in sexuality was not science by any scientist's definition, including his own. Having made a professional reputation (honestly) in the science of entomology, he abused that reputation in his published work on sexuality. He claimed to have not biased his sample when he clearly had. Kinsey insisted his results were a fair and unbiased sampling of American views on sexuality when they weren't. And he knew it all along. He wasn't publishing science as he claimed. He was publishing what amounted to little more than his own opinion, veiled in the words and methods of science, but backed by his own biased sampling. In that, he was a fraud. If he had prefaced his reports with his true methods of research, he would have been laughed out of academia. (Which might explain that omission.)
.....
He tossed huge amounts of his data that didn't support his agenda, whatever it was. Thus, his reports were crap.
Again, I doubt that his goal was to be accepted as a serious scientific working sexual researcher, only committed to science premises. Thus, he would have taken the faith of Mosher and others. I think he wanted research in sexuality to be accepted anyway, and that's why he made his research more kind of politically accepted, less scientific.
You may call his report crap, but this doesn't make him a fraud. Especially if you don't know his agenda.
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