THIS.
Sure some aspects of #OpenScience can help with the current reproducibility / replication / confidence crisis, but #OpenScience has its own goals and intrinsic values.https://twitter.com/o_guest/status/1068791012481470464 …
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I am not some all-knowing oracle type, I definitely don't know everything that happened and that's the point. Nobody is. Everybody can add their own correction so to speak and increase our understanding of events/science.
But talking about stuff without being an expert in them is... well... anti-science?
BTW I have this idea people, on Twitter, think I'm a lot younger than I am. Especially those who disagree with me. I find it really strange. They say things like that I finished my PhD like 1-2 years ago or something. It's nice. I guess I know how to moisturise my skin. 
And more than a few think I'm doing a PhD now. That would actually be nice TBH. Imagine if I had waited 10 years to do my PhD. It would have been such a nice ride. I'm so much more mature now.
INB4: You're still pretty immature.

Ha reminds of a similar thing. I am old enough to remember the arrival of the PLOS journals and how quite a few people said that their idealism would be their doom. Replication issues were not even a thing at the time. Well except for those who had read Meehl and similar stuff..
Ha, indeed. We have been around long enough to remember a time before science Twitter being a big deal. 
When I was a student in my second year I was told by one of the TA : "You should have a look at this new thing to search articles. It is called pubmeb. It is great."
#NotKidding #TheThingsWeTakeForGranted
And I am going to stop here because this is depressing and reminds me just of how old I am.
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