On Tue, May 7, 2013 at 9:48 AM, Edmund Storms <stor...@ix.netcom.com> wrote:

> Regardless of what is suggested as evidence, you will find a way to reject
> it.
>

This is often stated, but of course it's nonsense. Who could reject a
phenomenon that replaces fossil fuels? That powers a car without refueling?


Energy densities in the range of GJ/g are not some subtle thing. And when
they are claimed to be accessible from a small-scale experiment at ordinary
conditions, the evidence should be unequivocal.


But in fact, the evidence has not improved from the early 90s, and the
requirement for good evidence has not changed. As Rothwell has said: "It is
utterly impossible to fake palpable heat.... I do not think any scientist
will dispute this. ...An object that remains palpably warmer than the
surroundings is as convincing as anything can be.."


A very clearly isolated device that produces more heat than ten or a
hundred times its weight in gasoline would not be disputed as a new source
of energy. And some claims of heat-after-death or gas-loading should be
able to provide such a demonstration. But those claims are evidently not
robust enough, or they would have plopped such a thing in front of the 2004
DOE panel (or as many as necessary to get at least one working one), and
got all the finding they could use.


While such an isolated system would surely be sufficient evidence, it would
not be necessary. It's easy to imagine reproducible (even statistically)
experiments that require external input that would be convincing, but when
the quality of these experiments simply doesn't improve in 2 decades, when
there is no quantitative, inter-lab reproducibility, then pathological
science fits the evidence far better.


The goal after any new phenomenon is discovered is to keep looking until it
> is understood. Cude would stop that process.
>
>
>
The view of some skeptics, based on the weak and stagnant evidence, is that
a new phenomenon was not discovered. That eventually it is more reasonable
to accept that bigfoot probably doesn't exist, than to keep trying to get
one clear picture of it. Others disagree, and they are free to keep hunting.

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