Terry Blanton wrote:

>    ” WE GOT EVIDENCE THAT
>> THE ‘ EFFECT’ IS REAL BEYOND ANY REASONABLE DOUBT”.
>>
>> does not sound very encouraging in terms of CoP of the HCat.  If it
>> took this long to come to that conclusion, the performance must be
>> low.
>>
>
I don't see why.

In my experience, it takes professors an inordinately long time to decide
anything. By they time they decide where to eat lunch it is time for dinner
.


Andre Blum <andre_vor...@blums.nl> wrote:

First: "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" and all that.
>

I hate that aphorism! I really hate it. Here is what Melich and I wrote
about it, in response to the 2004 DoE reviewer #1:


Claim 1.5. “As many have said, extraordinary results require extraordinary
proof. Such proof is lacking.”

This is not a principle of science. It was coined by Carl Sagan for the
1980 “Cosmos” television series. Conventional scientific standards dictate
that extraordinary claims are best supported with ordinary evidence from
off-the-shelf instruments and standard techniques. All mainstream cold
fusion papers present this kind of evidence.

Conventional standards also dictate that all claims and arguments must be
held to the same standards of rigor. This includes skeptical assertions
that attempt to disprove cold fusion, which have been notably lacking in
rigor.

Laplace asserted that “The weight of evidence for an extraordinary claim
must be proportioned to its strangeness.” “Weight of evidence” is a measure
of how much evidence you have, not how extraordinary it is. There is more
evidence for cold fusion than for previously disputed effects. (For
example, although there were a few hundred papers published about
polywater, most were speculative, and only two labs reported success. [ref
Franks])

 Finally, the quality of being “extraordinary” is subjective. What seems
extraordinary to one person seems ordinary to another. Many scientific
phenomena that experts take for granted, such as quantum effects, seemed
extraordinary when they were discovered, and still seem extraordinary to
non-scientists.


- Jed

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