say no to broscience

icolmenares
icolmenares Posts: 38 Member
edited November 25 in Fitness and Exercise
Add me if you're against broscience lol

Replies

  • lilbitoftrouble
    lilbitoftrouble Posts: 2,052 Member
    If that's what it takes to add you, then I'm against it all right. Bad brosience!
  • DopeItUp
    DopeItUp Posts: 18,771 Member
    If that's what it takes to add you, then I'm against it all right. Bad brosience!

    Congratulations, you win creepiest post of the day.
  • palmettoadventurer
    palmettoadventurer Posts: 51 Member
    But I love that Youtube channel. It's hilarious.
  • icolmenares
    icolmenares Posts: 38 Member
    But I love that Youtube channel. It's hilarious.

    Lol not the YouTube channel I love that channel. I'm talking about actual broscience haha
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.
  • icolmenares
    icolmenares Posts: 38 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.

    The reason broscience sticks around is because there's always newbies that don't know what they're doing and will believe anything someone tells them about fitness. Like eat chicken and brown rice or you'll never be shredded. Or kill yourself in the gym or you will never make gains. Broscience is the reason why people never make good sustainable progress and give up too quick. I think if actual accurate information about nutrition and training would be spread out more people would enjoy fitness.
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.

    The reason broscience sticks around is because there's always newbies that don't know what they're doing and will believe anything someone tells them about fitness. Like eat chicken and brown rice or you'll never be shredded. Or kill yourself in the gym or you will never make gains. Broscience is the reason why people never make good sustainable progress and give up too quick. I think if actual accurate information about nutrition and training would be spread out more people would enjoy fitness.

    Not necessarily. Broscience often cuts out a lot of the complicated steps. I'm all about science and IIFYM, but broscience isn't the evil you are trying to make it seem.
  • icolmenares
    icolmenares Posts: 38 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.

    The reason broscience sticks around is because there's always newbies that don't know what they're doing and will believe anything someone tells them about fitness. Like eat chicken and brown rice or you'll never be shredded. Or kill yourself in the gym or you will never make gains. Broscience is the reason why people never make good sustainable progress and give up too quick. I think if actual accurate information about nutrition and training would be spread out more people would enjoy fitness.

    Not necessarily. Broscience often cuts out a lot of the complicated steps. I'm all about science and IIFYM, but broscience isn't the evil you are trying to make it seem.

    You got a point there. I had a stage like that when I first started and made some decent progress. But my progress and enjoyment has been way higher now that I know the facts behind it all. My point is that if people knew things right off the start, they would have better progress and more sustainability. But broscience works to an extent.
  • AJ_G
    AJ_G Posts: 4,158 Member
    It's not enough to know that something works, you must know why it works. The ancient sword forgers in Japan used to take a hot sword and plunge it into someone's stomach, killing them in the process. They found that this made the sword stronger, but they didn't know why. Turns out the carbon in their blood bonded to the steel when it was hot creating much stronger carbon steel. It's always important to know why
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.

    The reason broscience sticks around is because there's always newbies that don't know what they're doing and will believe anything someone tells them about fitness. Like eat chicken and brown rice or you'll never be shredded. Or kill yourself in the gym or you will never make gains. Broscience is the reason why people never make good sustainable progress and give up too quick. I think if actual accurate information about nutrition and training would be spread out more people would enjoy fitness.

    Not necessarily. Broscience often cuts out a lot of the complicated steps. I'm all about science and IIFYM, but broscience isn't the evil you are trying to make it seem.

    You got a point there. I had a stage like that when I first started and made some decent progress. But my progress and enjoyment has been way higher now that I know the facts behind it all. My point is that if people knew things right off the start, they would have better progress and more sustainability. But broscience works to an extent.

    Except that most people don't even know broscience when they start, so that's irrelevant. Eventually people learn the broscience and make progress, then learn science and make even more.
  • icolmenares
    icolmenares Posts: 38 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    usmcmp wrote: »
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience isn't always harmful or incorrect. The reason it sticks around is because it works. Not for the reasons they think it does, but for the most part a lot of broscience works.

    The reason broscience sticks around is because there's always newbies that don't know what they're doing and will believe anything someone tells them about fitness. Like eat chicken and brown rice or you'll never be shredded. Or kill yourself in the gym or you will never make gains. Broscience is the reason why people never make good sustainable progress and give up too quick. I think if actual accurate information about nutrition and training would be spread out more people would enjoy fitness.

    Not necessarily. Broscience often cuts out a lot of the complicated steps. I'm all about science and IIFYM, but broscience isn't the evil you are trying to make it seem.

    You got a point there. I had a stage like that when I first started and made some decent progress. But my progress and enjoyment has been way higher now that I know the facts behind it all. My point is that if people knew things right off the start, they would have better progress and more sustainability. But broscience works to an extent.

    Except that most people don't even know broscience when they start, so that's irrelevant. Eventually people learn the broscience and make progress, then learn science and make even more.

    I've seen newbs coached by someone knowledgeable and that know broscience right off the bat. And not really, some people think broscience is the way to go and at some point become stagnant. Then they either make no progress or quit.
  • LolBroScience
    LolBroScience Posts: 4,537 Member
    Broscience ftw
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    Broscience ftw

    post-38727-NPH-I-request-the-highest-of-f-P6wG.gif
  • LolBroScience
    LolBroScience Posts: 4,537 Member
    usmcmp wrote: »
    Broscience ftw

    post-38727-NPH-I-request-the-highest-of-f-P6wG.gif

    hi-5-high-five-2524598-1600-1200.jpg
  • DavPul
    DavPul Posts: 61,406 Member
    AJ_G wrote: »
    It's not enough to know that something works, you must know why it works. The ancient sword forgers in Japan used to take a hot sword and plunge it into someone's stomach, killing them in the process. They found that this made the sword stronger, but they didn't know why. Turns out the carbon in their blood bonded to the steel when it was hot creating much stronger carbon steel. It's always important to know why

    I bet that information really made the people with the large sword holes in their stomachs feel better right as they breathed their last breath
  • AJ_G
    AJ_G Posts: 4,158 Member
    edited October 2015
    DavPul wrote: »
    AJ_G wrote: »
    It's not enough to know that something works, you must know why it works. The ancient sword forgers in Japan used to take a hot sword and plunge it into someone's stomach, killing them in the process. They found that this made the sword stronger, but they didn't know why. Turns out the carbon in their blood bonded to the steel when it was hot creating much stronger carbon steel. It's always important to know why

    I bet that information really made the people with the large sword holes in their stomachs feel better right as they breathed their last breath

    @DavPul It helped the people who would have kept getting stabbed in the gut and dying lol
  • RoxieDawn
    RoxieDawn Posts: 15,488 Member
    AJ_G wrote: »
    DavPul wrote: »
    AJ_G wrote: »
    It's not enough to know that something works, you must know why it works. The ancient sword forgers in Japan used to take a hot sword and plunge it into someone's stomach, killing them in the process. They found that this made the sword stronger, but they didn't know why. Turns out the carbon in their blood bonded to the steel when it was hot creating much stronger carbon steel. It's always important to know why

    I bet that information really made the people with the large sword holes in their stomachs feel better right as they breathed their last breath

    @DavPul It helped the people who would have kept getting stabbed in the gut and dying lol

    Funny Ha Ha...

    Btw.. I love all science... bro and nonbro... I made something work no matter where it came from..
This discussion has been closed.