D
Debaser
Guest
This is still the real world. It seems pretty common for this type of situation to occur:
1. Bob flat benches 180. He complains that he has no upper chest.
2. Steve claims that his full upper chest is the result of incline presses. He said he never does flat presses anymore, and inclines 350 lbs.
3. Bob takes his advice. Bob drops flat presses and over the next couple years takes his incline to 350 lbs. "Wow, he was right," he says, "my upper chest is awesome now!"
4. Then Jim comes along, complains he has no upper chest and Bob tells him incline presses do the trick.
It's obvious to see how easily misinformation can be spread. When I was saying correlation doesn't imply causation, this is exactly what that means. He equated having an upper chest to the fact that he did inclines, where he should have equated it to the fact that he increased his poundage greatly, and any pressing movement would have done the same thing given this increase.
And no exodus, because that claim was never substantiated. There was no original backing of these claims. They essentially made shit up, or misinterpreted the facts to a laughable degree. I actually just read a magazine which finally admits that they fucked up (of course not in their words), in a sense, by saying that lab tests show that inclines really are inferior as a chest movement compared to flat benches and declines.
1. Bob flat benches 180. He complains that he has no upper chest.
2. Steve claims that his full upper chest is the result of incline presses. He said he never does flat presses anymore, and inclines 350 lbs.
3. Bob takes his advice. Bob drops flat presses and over the next couple years takes his incline to 350 lbs. "Wow, he was right," he says, "my upper chest is awesome now!"
4. Then Jim comes along, complains he has no upper chest and Bob tells him incline presses do the trick.
It's obvious to see how easily misinformation can be spread. When I was saying correlation doesn't imply causation, this is exactly what that means. He equated having an upper chest to the fact that he did inclines, where he should have equated it to the fact that he increased his poundage greatly, and any pressing movement would have done the same thing given this increase.
And no exodus, because that claim was never substantiated. There was no original backing of these claims. They essentially made shit up, or misinterpreted the facts to a laughable degree. I actually just read a magazine which finally admits that they fucked up (of course not in their words), in a sense, by saying that lab tests show that inclines really are inferior as a chest movement compared to flat benches and declines.