On Mon, Jan 27, 2014 at 8:00 PM, Foks0904 . <[email protected]> wrote:

It seems to me there would have to be a tremendous conspiracy of chance for
> such pattern to emerge. Doesn't mean it couldn't, it just means that if our
> opinions are gambles (which of course they are), I'll take my chances that
> this pattern represents more than just a mere flook.
>

You're being practical.  This is the attitude of an engineer.  The
physicist might say "junk in, junk out."  The suggestion is that you could
be seeing a very alluring pattern that is an artifact of the poor
procedures you used for measuring.  In a less-than-ironclad experiment, you
will have not done everything possible to rule out systematic error, so
your results cannot be built upon, even if they're suggestive.  Many people
here did not have much of a problem with the approach that the
Elforsk-sponsored team took to evaluate Rossi's latest public test, with
the IR camera and so on.  Ericsson and Pomp had a big problem with their
method, and it's probably largely due to their being physicists.  There's a
cultural disconnect somewhere.  Engineers are practical folks, and
physicists want apodictic knowledge.

Engineers will show the way in the case of cold fusion, and then physicists
will try to explain things later on, after the fact.  In fact, one wonders
whether it is wise to entrust the development of hot fusion to physicists.

Eric

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