originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
It’s not a question of professional experience or aptitude.
Have you ever looked at cellartracker?
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
It’s not a question of professional experience or aptitude.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
It’s not a question of professional experience or aptitude.
Have you ever looked at cellartracker?
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
It’s not a question of professional experience or aptitude.
Have you ever looked at cellartracker?
originally posted by Rahsaan:
For me, cellatracker shows the wide variance in reliability of tasting notes. For wines that you know, some people will accurately diagnose how it showed and other people will write some wild stuff. Some self-reports are more reliable than others.
As we all have different genetic equipment, I find that I must discard certain reviews because they don't resemble my experience in the least! (Note that I don't say it's wrong but it isn't relevant for decision-making for my consumption.)originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
It’s a different but important point that we don’t have a grounded statistical distribution to compare one’s own experiences with the norm. But I think that only exacerbates or at least highlights the potential to consider one’s own experience as truth and dismiss other people’s observations (trusted or not) as wrong.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
As I said to Nathan, I am, of course, aware of problems about self-reporting. One of my pet peeves, more on another bored but here too, is dismissing reports one does not like with concepts like bias confirmations and the unreliability of self-reporting. One is either willing to apply these concepts to one's own experiences or one should not apply them at all in debate, as it's an obvious example of poisoning the waters. And one should certainly be very wary of applying them to all experiences that run counter to one's own as that way your own beleifs cannot be falsified. I wasn't contesting Nathan's use of the concept of unreliable self-reporting, only is contradictory way of applying it.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
As I said to Nathan, I am, of course, aware of problems about self-reporting. One of my pet peeves, more on another bored but here too, is dismissing reports one does not like with concepts like bias confirmations and the unreliability of self-reporting. One is either willing to apply these concepts to one's own experiences or one should not apply them at all in debate, as it's an obvious example of poisoning the waters. And one should certainly be very wary of applying them to all experiences that run counter to one's own as that way your own beleifs cannot be falsified. I wasn't contesting Nathan's use of the concept of unreliable self-reporting, only is contradictory way of applying it.
I'm inclined to disagree, where self-reporting is concerned. It seems to me that an individual trained in the discipline of statistical sampling and analysis will self-report with substantially less error and bias - if not perfectly - than one not so trained.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
As I said to Nathan, I am, of course, aware of problems about self-reporting. One of my pet peeves, more on another bored but here too, is dismissing reports one does not like with concepts like bias confirmations and the unreliability of self-reporting. One is either willing to apply these concepts to one's own experiences or one should not apply them at all in debate, as it's an obvious example of poisoning the waters. And one should certainly be very wary of applying them to all experiences that run counter to one's own as that way your own beleifs cannot be falsified. I wasn't contesting Nathan's use of the concept of unreliable self-reporting, only is contradictory way of applying it.
I'm inclined to disagree, where self-reporting is concerned. It seems to me that an individual trained in the discipline of statistical sampling and analysis will self-report with substantially less error and bias - if not perfectly - than one not so trained.
. Interesting. CT tells me that I have a bottle of this left in the cellar. After my recent good experience with a bottle of the ‘14 Les Choisilles, I should probably give this a whirl.originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Tonight a 2014 Chidaine Breuil was, for the first time, a touch oxidized. Not enough to prevent consumption (i.e., Selosse level), bit a break from my experience of this vintage over the last six years or so.