data not facts. Also unless the alternative model is better at
explaining the data than the existing theory then why accept it? In
this case the GPS theory makes a lot of sense. Its suggesting that
there was a methodological flaw. It also points out the utility of
Sagan's rule - extraordinary claims require extraordinary data. In
this case they did not have it. A much simpler explanation
(relativistic effects as a function of gps distances) is a more likely
explanation of the phenominon than things suddenly leaping ahead in
time, or breaking the light speed barrier by unknown or unknowable
mechanisms.There is simply not enough replicatability for this to be a
reliable result. What is needed is for the study to be replicated, but
this time taking into account the possible GPS effects.

As for peer review, you simply have not worked with peer review
committees for scientific journals or for conferences. I think that
the physicist and writer David Brin said it best:

"Top scientists are the most competitive human beings of all time.
Put three in a room and there's blood on the floor. Below them, "young
guns" are constantly looking for some giant to topple or "wrong
corner" of  current theory to shine light into and make a reputation.
"

peer reviews are one of the chief ways to do this, its like throwing a
bucket of chum to killer sharks. Although to tell the truth, sharks
are more civil about it. If there is any flaw in the study, or factor
that was not accounted for by the authors' interpretation of the
results, its like blood in the water. I've served on a few committees,
and a quarter of my wife's job is supporting such committees, so I
should know.

As far as I can see the ideas that you have pointed out that have
falled into disuse or by the wayside is one of the most elegant self
correcting mechanisms around. Much better than what you find in
politics, religion, journalism or business for instance.

However you are editing out, those learned people, as you call it with
great scorn, invariably say, "According to current theory, you cannot
go faster than light." which is a good data based approach. It tells
nothing more or less than it should. Bu tth epoint is though you also
seem to forget that unlike religion, politic, finance, business etc,
science learns from mistakes. All the things you mentioned fell by the
wayside for the one reason that nothing in scientific research and
theory stands permanently. But the criteria for contradictory data and
change is high. The most recent set of studies have too many
alternative plausible explanations to contradict anything yet.


On Tue, Oct 18, 2011 at 5:32 PM, denstar <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> The scientific community has never resisted change.  They're objective, yo!
>
> The issue is scientists can be dogmatic, and "true believers" too
> (sort of the flip of what you are saying, no?).
>
> There are no real "facts", right?  And yet you'll hear learned
> individuals say such tripe as "you cannot go faster than light".  And
> mean it!
>
> That's /not/ what science is about.  Science isn't about fact, it's
> about experiment (or something).
>
> The sound barrier was a lame example.  But there's Rosalyn Yalow (got
> a Nobel 20 something years after theory being dissed, I guess),
> Newton's universal law of gravity.  Heat as a fluid?  Molecular theory
> of gasses?  Continental drift?  Mendel's genetics?  Michael Polanyi's
> work with solid whatsit?
>
> There's *tons* of Nobel winners who's theories were resisted
> (sometimes for decades), not on merit, but because of a human trait to
> resist change (that's crazy talk!  Everybody knows you get better by
> letting the bad blood out! *plops paper into trash*).  Hundreds of
> papers that were turned down, only to become "cornerstones" of
> science, sometimes as much as half a century later (in rare instances
> longer!).
>
> "Peer review" is an interesting concept.  Don't believe too much into it!  ;)
>
> My point, such as it is, is that we need to beware the one as much as
> the other.  Too easy a belief, too hard a cynic.  Thanks to
> experiment, the only *down* side to a bad theory is it doesn't pan
> out.  What's the down side to ignoring something that would put us
> that much further on our path to enlightenment?  Better to try, and
> find out (or at least try to find out), than never to try because you
> don't "believe".
>
> Keep an open mind, dude.  Even Einstein has been wrong.
>
> As for the GPS theory, did you read the comments on that link?  Are
> all those folks just "true believers"?  Or do maybe some of them have
> some good points?
>
> Science shouldn't be a popularity contest.  :)p
>
> |>3|\| "and other cliches" 1
>
> --
> In such diffused changes of culture two factors are necessary: contact
> and understanding.
> Hu Shih
>
> On Mon, Oct 17, 2011 at 6:19 PM, Larry C. Lyons wrote:
>>
>> Maybe but the issue is that despite all the massive amounts of
>> evidence against it, the true believer dismisses such as a conspiracy
>> or other some bit of crud.
>>
>> As for the sound barrier, that wasn't so much of a scientific one as
>> an engineering effort. What was needed was the design of a wing that
>> could withstand the buffeting that happens when crossing that
>> threshold. First the US with a special built rocket then the British
>> with an aircraft these engineering issues were solved. Nothing similar
>> to what is discussed.
>>
>> As for the GPS theory, I am sure it was discussed a lot just a month
>> ago in Portland Oregon. The author of that paper was giving a talk at
>> the annual ION scientific meeting.
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 17, 2011 at 4:50 PM, denstar <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> On Sat, Oct 15, 2011 at 9:53 AM, Larry C. Lyons wrote:
>>>>
>>>> If you remember what happened with palladium based fusion, there will
>>>> be some true believers who will try and push it in spite of the
>>>> contrary data.
>>>
>>> If you remember what happened with the Sound Barrier (why is it called
>>> a barrier again?) and Gödel, you'd still be pushing too.  :)
>>>
>>> Maybe not "it" specifically, but still.
>>>
>>> Has the GPS theory even been corroborated/verified/whatever?  Or is
>>> this a case of "hey, that sound logical, and fits with how I already
>>> see the universe!"?  =)p
>>>
>>> :DeN "full of wonder (or something)" Uno
>>>
>>> --
>>> For all the social changes in China can be traced to their early
>>> beginnings in the days when the new tools or vehicles of commerce and
>>> locomotion first brought the Chinese people into unavoidable contact
>>> with the strange ways and novel goods of the Western peoples.
>>> Hu Shih
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
> 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Order the Adobe Coldfusion Anthology now!
http://www.amazon.com/Adobe-Coldfusion-Anthology/dp/1430272155/?tag=houseoffusion
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:343620
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/unsubscribe.cfm

Reply via email to