At 03:57 PM 8/21/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:

Eff the skeptics.

My feelings exactly.

Voice of America, I am today.

Whether "5% success rate" is good news or bad news depends entirely on the details of those experiments.

They ran 300 experiments.  . . .

I believe the 5% refers to the last set of experiments run after ICCF16. There were, as I recall, about 110 in this series. Six of them produced irrefutably positive results. I mean results so large and clearly detected that they convinced even David Kidwell, who is the most skeptical cold fusion researcher I know.

I think before ICCF16 they got some positive indications, but no results that everyone at the NRL agreed were definitely real.

Basically, pseudoskeptics look at that 5% figure and make whatever assumptions confirm what they want to believe. What that really means, at least in part, is that the researchers worked hard and kept looking.

Pseudoskeptics will assume that the 5% is just noise. Indeed, I ran into this argument recently. Storms (2007 and 2010) has a bar chart showing the distribution of excess heat results from many cold fusion experiments. The first bar is close to noise, but some results in that bar would be significantly above noise. But the chart goes out, showing results distributed across a wide range of excess heat values. Storms point is that if this was noise, all the results would be in the first bar. That first bar is indeed the majority of results. How was this translated by the pseudoskeptics?

"Even according to Storms, most cold fusion experiments fail."

It's a standard human phenomenon. We strongly tend to see what we already believe. If we are not aware of this danger, and sometimes even if we are, we see new data and interpret it to confirm and strengthen what we already "know."

Ahem. It gets worse as we get older, sometimes.

I know of only one defense against this, and that is detachment from all interpretation, and it is not necessarily reliable, because we are trained from infancy to intepret. Interpretation isn't "wrong," but it's highly limiting. Strictly speaking, it is neither true nor false. That is, interpretations are not "true" because they cannot capture the depth of reality, they are, at best, useful. They are not "false" in the same way that a hammer is not "false." It is merely a tool, that is either more workable or less workable.

What we *can* do, I'll testify, is to quickly recognize and discriminate between interpretation and raw fact. I.e., observation. While there is always some level of interpretation in observation, we actually are quite good, as human beings, at observation, if we keep it simple. We can get better with training.

One of the key distinctions about interpretation is that it's a choice. It is always possible to come up with multiple interpretations. What I observed is what I observed. I might possibly improve my memory a bit, but I can't change what I observed, itself. I can change my interpretations, or propose alternate ones. This gets a lot easier if I don't require that the interpretations be "true." It helps to know that none of them are actually true, that very idea is one of the ideas that literally drive us crazy. The real question for interpretation is its effect. Interpretation is a choice, and we are actually responsible for it. If we had no choice, if interpretation were controlled by "truth," we'd have no responsibility.

Sorry, it's just the *truth* that you are a horrible human being and must be eliminated. We think the only problem with is that the genocidal maniac is wrong. No, it's the whole concept of truth of interpretation. It's just "true" that communism will take away our freedoms, and that Obama is a communist. It's just "true" that Saddam was a danger to the world and it was necessary to invade Iraq. For that matter, to drop the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It just "true" that this saved millions of lives.

Basically, we make up meaning all the time. We make choices. We are responsible for those choices.

That's the bad news and the good news.

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