seedload wrote:93143 wrote:
It strikes me that Ivy Matt is basically correct. Evidence for a mutually-exclusive alternative certainly counts as evidence against a proposition - ie: if existing physics says it can't happen, then odds are it can't. Lack of support in existing physics does not - ie: if the claim is enough of an edge case that the existing knowledge base merely doesn't support it, this does not imply that the proposition is wrong - though it does at least constitute a lack of evidence for said proposition, and there's no need to get emotionally (or financially) invested in it until some shows up. But the difference between "wait and see" and "not proven yet" is semantic. What I object to is the radical-skeptical position of "false until proven", which is simply bad philosophy, and which I have encountered from time to time.
Forgive me being on edge, but I was just called pathological just because I don't believe Rossi.
FYI, I basically agree with what you wrote above, except that in this case I have a particular reason for extreme doubt. One claim unsupported by the existing knowledge base is a hard pill to swallow, but one we should consider.
Two claims, unrelated technically, each individually revolutionary, and each individually resting on the extreme outskirts of their own corners of the existing knowledge base, is a different beast all together.
The day he made the second claim (revolutionary new method of cheap isotopic separation) is the day the probability of fraud went to approaching 100% in my mind.
I have a clear reason behind my strong position, despite Parallel's imagination that I don't.
regards
As objective thinkers, scientists, engineers, physicists, and hobbyists, our goals are not to defend Rossi's work but to punch holes in it. That is the scientific method, to find errors in the fundamental understanding of the claims made. Several of Rossi's claims have been countered by many here and definitely after a review of the posts there seems to be sides.
So as an objective thinker, Parallel, I ask, where do you see holes in Rossi's line of thinking, proposed methodology, and demonstrations? I've noted you've defended it alot, but what are your concerns with it?
As people looking clearly at science we need to consider all evidence, and dismiss nothing. But before that makes me sound like parallel note that in this case "all evidence" includes:
Rossi's track record of doing useful science
Rossi's motivation (it is not easy to be objective and truthful, as scientists try, even if you are a scientist)
How these phenomena, if they exist, would fit into any possible theory.
All three give heavy negative bias. Things like gamma counts anomalous, isotopic ratios anomalous, don't help the "fitting into possible theories".
You then look at how strong is the positive info. In this case anomalous heat is all that is claimed, but the measurements have always been flaky, when it would be easy to have non-flaky measurements. That is weak evidence.
So the unbiassed position has always been to be heavily biassed against Rossi. So to speak.
But that does not mean it is our job to punch holes in Rossi's stuff. Merely to look at the results carefully with a very strong but not certain initial viewpoint that they are wrong.
Krivit's detailed report adds more flesh to this - doubtless his next report on the experimental details will similarly add more flesh. But you don't need it to see the Rossi evidence as too weak to be significant.