http://bigthink.com/in-their-own-words/what-is-scientific-mediation

Could it be possible to organize a "Scientific Mediation" on LENR:

cientific mediation works like this.  You bring together one scientist from
each point of view.  Scientist A wants to do one thing, Scientist B wants
the opposite.  Then with the help of a mediator, they write a joint paper.
And the purpose of the paper is to advise a government agency or a court.

They write a joint paper where they state the areas they agree on in order
to narrow down the dispute, the fundamental points that they disagree
about, and then - this is the trick - they have to agree on why they
disagree.

They never have to agree on the merits, but they have to agree on why they
disagree.  And in doing that, with the help of a mediator, they really
begin to understand each other’s position and what happens is that their
personal biases surface.  Because when the science is incomplete, and
people are taking opposite sides, it’s because they’re filling in the gaps
with their own persona biases and their political opinions.  And that’s not
what we need from scientists.  We just want their scientific opinion.  We
want to get rid of all that other stuff.  That’s not their job to tell us
what to do politically when they’re advising the government.

So, this process removes all of that and it shows what’s really known,
what’s not known and why people from different political leanings will fall
in different places along this spectrum of possibilities and then that
report makes clear to the nonscientists, either the agency or also the
public, what the real scientific dispute is about.

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