At 09:58 AM 12/17/2009, you wrote:
Steven Krivit wrote:

I'm sure Shanahan is finding immeasurable entertainment in these messages. Particularly your comment about "certified fruitcake."

It is the season, though, isn't it?

Absolutely! And for the record, I'm crazy about fruitcake, especially made with cognac. I don't know why people dislike it so.

I think that people like Shanahan and Morrison are good for cold fusion, and I appreciate their contributions. They make the researchers look good. They are good foils. Anyone familiar with the facts will see, for example, that Shanahan has a screw loose when he claims:

1. There is no opposition to cold fusion.

2. And because there is no opposition, researchers have been able to convince organizations such as the ENEA and the Italian Physical Society to sponsor conferences, and they have magically hoodwinked experts such as Robert Duncan to believe there is ~1 W input and ~20 W output at Energetics Technology.

He honestly believes that people such as the President of the Italian Physical Society and Duncan are gullible fools who cannot understand basic chemistry, and they have overlooked Shanahan's technical objections. Shanahan, Morrison, Taubes, Park and these others do have monumental self confidence! You have to hand it to them. They think they know more about electrochemistry than Fleischmann or Bockris; more about calorimetry than Duncan; more about tritium than the top experts at Los Alamos and BARC, and more about theoretical physics than Schwinger.

Look, Jed, you're right. Now, dump the collective victim complex and start believing that other people, given the right opportunities and time, will see it. What you've said about Shanahan is generally correct. The response to Shanahan is diagnostic. Here he is, someone with some actual credentials, and I welcomed him at the Cold fusion article, because knowledgeable skeptics are needed, and was really only disappointed because his criticisms were so shallow, over-extended and largely without substance. There has been little support for Shanahan, who would really like the article to be a skeptical hit piece, far more than it is. There are, in the article, at least some shreds of evidence that might lead a reader to read the literature; at least readers can understand from the article that research is continuing, it is not a dead field. They will end up with an overly skeptical understanding if they read nothing more, and that's a problem, for sure, but Shanahan's sense of frustration at Wikipedia, which I believe is real, demonstrates how weak the skeptical position has become.

It's failing and falling. Positive research reports are on the increase, and negative reports have almost completely vanished. Want to find something negative and recent, you'll have to be content with Kowalski's paper responding to Mosier-Boss. And Kowalski clearly believes that CF is real, he's merely criticizing some particular conclusion, and, to my view, with some justification. It's great that his criticism was published, even if he's wrong in some way.

When positive papers are being published in peer-reviewed journals, and if the skeptical position were tenable, we would also see truly negative publications passing peer-review as well. The idea that there is a conspiracy of some kind against skeptical papers is beyond belief. No, if there is a blackout on the cold fusion topic in some "mainstream" publications, the skeptics have shot themselves in the foot, but the other publications, willing to publish positive articles, would also publish negative, if they could pass peer-review.

My own opinion is that there aren't continuing negative publications, criticizing the continued positive publications, because it has become really difficult to find convincing negative evidence. It's not about the "difficulty of proving a negative," that's a red herring. It's about the difficulty of explaining the positive results and showing evidence that demonstrates they are artifact, like the experiment done by the scientist who exposed N-rays as observer imagination, by secretly removing a critical part of the device in a demonstration, but the observations continued unchanged. Like the NMR spectrum of "polywater" that showed the apparent origin with high probability.

The current skeptical bias, which may even be a general majority view, is mere inertia, persistence of vision, and it will pass as the evidence becomes more and more visible and more and more difficult to ignore.

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