"There’s no question someone can ask me that I wouldn’t be comfortable answering".
This is not a sign of intelligence, but in fact, quite the opposite. Beware of the man that doesn't know what he doesn't know. After reading many of your posts, there is no doubt that you are Completely uninformed but totally confident you know what you are talking about and absolutely convinced you are doing what you think is correct.
You, Cortex labs, and others on this and other social media platforms are examples of the Dunning-Kruger effect which is our tendency to overestimate our own knowledge/skills/competence and underestimate our own ignorance.
The English philosopher Bertrand Russell once said, “The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.
It turns out that Russell’s axiom has been studied and the data back it up. People who are bad at something do believe they are good at it, and people who are good at it do believe they are bad at it. Amateurs are overconfident and experts are underconfident. Newbies believe they’ve got it all figured out and the weathered veterans understand that they still have much more to learn.
So there are many questions that an expert would be uncomfortable answering, because they realize they don't have the answer. They know what they don't know.
And when it comes to hormones and the decades some of us have spent studying hormones like testosterone the more we learn the more we realize we don't know. Now in that process we certainly have a strong foundation of knowledge but nonetheless we're not confident that we know everything.
It's not just me that sees this issue with your comments. Madman just posted this in response to your post in "Testosterone Propionate"
"Still spreading nonsense on here!"....yes you are and the mere fact you believe and propagate anything that Ryan Bellows of CortexLabs says is absolute proof that you lack the experience to know what you don't know and are easily influenced by people like Ryan who epitomizes the Duning-Kruger effect. Anyone with just a basic working knowledge of the medical literature and physiology would destroy Ryan