Jed, you are describing a gentleman that has supreme confidence in his 
knowledge of physics and believes that there can be nothing new under the sun.  
I consider this the height of ignorance that many attain in their lives to 
their detriment.  Thanks God that he was not in charge of just about every 
other endeavor that has advanced knowledge.  Where would electronics be had 
someone with that outlook held the purse strings?


In my experience, people with the attitude that you are suggesting are not 
capable of understanding new concepts since they waste most of their effort 
hiding their ignorance from the people around them.  They dare not ask 
questions which might show weakness and they run from any challenge to their 
beliefs.  What a waste of good organic material.


Gibbs on the other hand should not be blamed too severely.  In his case, it 
would be a major embarrassment to his career if he went out on a limb and 
declared LENR as real and later was found to be in error.  He will most likely 
not change his position until a product is accessible and/or the main 
physicists acknowledge it is proven.  He is acting in his best interest in this 
way although some of us may think it is shallow.  Do you think that the 
investment world is frozen in a similar manner when new technologies emerge?  
Who is willing to be the first brave guy to take that step into the unknown and 
risk being labeled stupid?


Dave



-----Original Message-----
From: Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Dec 31, 2012 11:25 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Gibbs does not understand that physics are empirical


Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <[email protected]> wrote:








Why speculate that he would say something stupid like that?


Because I have heard it countless times from Piel, Huizenga and Many 
Distinguished Scientists, including several of the ones on the 2004 DoE panel, 
and most of the Jasons. This is a widely held point of view.



That does not mean that Gibbs holds it!


Look, he said right here, in this forum, that he wants to see a "testable 
theory." He said that again, and again, and again. I pointed to the testable 
claim made by EPRI. A claim, not a theory. I pointed out that to an 
experimentalist, confirming that claim is as good as confirming a nuclear 
theory.


Gibbs did not respond. I assume he is saying the same thing as I have heard 
from ten-thousand theorists since 1989: "We will not believe this until you 
show us a complete nuclear theory that we agree with." I assume he is parroting 
that point of view. Okay, so ahead and ask Gibbs what he meant. If I am wrong, 
he can say so. 


 

Also because that is what Gibbs is saying when he repeatedly demands a 
"testable theory."



Had he "demanded a testable theory" you'd be right.


It is right here!!! Here is an example:



Sat, Dec 29, 2012 at 11:58 AM, Mark Gibbs <[email protected]> wrote:
> Sure, there's lots of interesting experiments but is there a testable
> theory?



 
Maybe. The DoE may easily be in bed with the hot fusion projects, it was in 
1989. So? Huizenga's book is *still* embarrassing, and is more and more visible 
that way.


In recent years, Chu and many others have cited Huizenga and his book as proof 
that cold fusion does not exist. Most mainstream physicists agree with Huizenga 
completely, that cold fusion violates theory and it cannot possibly exist, and 
that all reported results are mistakes or fraud. I have heard that from 
HUNDREDS of leading scientists such as Chu. I am certain that is what they 
believe. I am also certain they have not read any papers on this subject. That 
is what they tell me.


You may think the book is embarrassing. I think it is a hatchet job. However, 
Chu and others think it is the truth.
 


 

But he was an old man, and, unfortunately, probably losing it.



He wrote most of the book while conducting the ERAB panel investigation. It was 
published soon after ERAB was published. He was still at the peak of his 
intellectual power, and political power. He repeated the statements in the book 
many times, in person, and in letter to me and to others.


 
What you saw with the Amoco situation would be how he responded when he 
couldn't understand what was happening. He'd flee.


He understood perfectly what was happening. I am sure he did not think the 
results were real. I am pretty sure he thought: "Another damn fake result! More 
nonsense to contend with!" He did not say that. He refused to talk to the 
authors. But that is what other leading skeptics said, and I am sure he agreed.


As for his statements about Miles in his book, he was posturing to make himself 
seem open minded. He never took those results seriously, or any of the similar 
helium results from Italy. He knew about those results, because he attended 
ICCF conferences. I think that was before the second edition of the book. He 
might have written about them or spoken about them any time. For that matter, 
he might have described the tritium from Bockris or Storms, or the excess heat 
results from McKubre. But he never said ONE WORD ABOUT ANY OF THAT. Not in his 
book, not in public, not in his letters. Never. He said only "it is all bunk" 
(to me). He did not talk about these results not because he wanted to hide the 
truth, or he was afraid he was wrong. Only because he was sure it was bunk, and 
he thought that even mentioning these results would confuse the issue and make 
some people imagine there might be something to cold fusion after all.


He knew he was right. He was supremely confident of that. He saw it as his job 
to present the facts which proved he was right, and not to present any of the 
lies and nonsense published by McKubre and the others. That was his point of 
view, and he made it 100% clear to me and to many others. Steven Chu and many 
others have said the same thing, almost word for word. These people do not hide 
their opinions on this matter.


- Jed




 

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