home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Nntp-Posting-Host: gyda.ifi.uio.no
- Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sunic!aun.uninett.no!nuug!ifi.uio.no!gisle
- From: gisle@ifi.uio.no (Gisle Hannemyr)
- Subject: Re: Scientology FAQ.
- In-Reply-To: jerry@lds-az.loral.com's message of Thu, 19 Nov 1992 04:17:31 GMT
- Message-ID: <GISLE.92Nov20164920@gyda.ifi.uio.no>
- Sender: gisle@ifi.uio.no (Gisle Hannemyr)
- Organization: gisle@ifi.uio.no
- References: <1992Nov15.234422.8510@stortek.com> <1992Nov16.084801.2093@lds-az.loral.com>
- <1992Nov16.160555.18066@stortek.com>
- <1992Nov19.041731.16568@lds-az.loral.com>
- Date: Fri, 20 Nov 1992 15:49:19 GMT
- Lines: 102
- Originator: gisle@gyda.ifi.uio.no
-
- In article <1992Nov19.041731.16568@lds-az.loral.com> jerry@lds-az.loral.com (J Barbera) writes:
- > If you and others out there want "independently verifiable results" you
- > might want to get them through your own research. Right? Isn't that
- > proof?
-
- Wrong.
-
- Let me once again (I posted this about a month ago) try to explain
- what is meant by independent verification in the scientific community:
-
- 1) The scientific community has no _duty_ to accept scientology at
- face value. As any new and unproved school of thought, it is
- the responsibility of scientology itself to provide the evidence
- that indicate that it merits attention.
-
- 2) The evidence should be in the form of "papers" which carefully
- describe experiments supporting the new school of thought. The
- description should include a description of the theory the
- experiment is designed to prove, how to construct any unusal equipment
- required, each step of the experiment, controls, and the expected
- outcome, plus an evaluation and and analysis where the experimenter
- explains how this particular experiment supports the theory.
-
- The initial "papers" within a field must necessarely come from the
- proponents of the field (i.e. scientologists themselves in this
- particular case).
-
- It is also important to understand what is acceptable and what
- is not acceptable when reporting on experiments. The descriptions
- need to be complete and detailed. Assertions of the type: "I
- did an incredible amount of research and it all comfirmed my
- theories" is _not_ an acceptable form for a report. Nor is:
- "I tried this out and it worked great, but the procedure
- I followed won't make any sense to you until you've studied
- and understood all this other material about my theory.".
-
- Scientific papers are judged on the quality of their experimental
- design, controls, and logic. Amazing results are not considered
- an achivement if the quality of the experiment is poor or the
- logic flawed.
-
- 3) You've noted that critic prefer "independently verifiable results".
- By this they mean that the "papers" I described above should be
- "peer reviewed" and published in a "peer reviewed journal". The
- phrase "peer review" simply mean that the paper has been read
- and commented by some other respected scientists knowledgeable
- in scientific procedures, and that the reviewers have approved
- the quality of the experimental design and controls, the
- validity of the logic used to argue the author's position and
- whatever else they may think relevant. It is not uncommon that
- reviewers find major flaws in scientific papers, in which case they
- are returned to the authors with a list of suggested improvements.
- and the author is invited to submit an inproved version for a
- new review at a later date.
-
- It is important to emphasise that "independent sources" does not
- mean that the critics insist that the original author of the
- paper is independent of the CoS, only that the the paper is
- _published_ in a scientific journal not controlled by the
- CoS or one of its fronts.
-
- Independent publication is of course not absolutely necessary for
- something to be considered scientific. I would be happy to read
- both unpublished papers and papers published by the CoS [[ and
- I have said so in my many letters to Narconon in my attempts to get
- hold of any studies that substantiate their claims, but they don't
- even seem to be able to supply this type of material. ]]
-
- However, publication in independent peer reviewed journals is the
- most important quality assurance mechanism available in the scientific
- community, and is therefore commonly considered a good measure on the
- merits of a new school of thought.
-
- 4) Following publication of a paper describing some exciting new
- development, scientists outside the group of original proponents
- will usually try to replicate the experiment working from the
- published descriptions. This may either support the initial
- theory, uncover flaws in the experimental design, or simply
- fail to reproduce the same results.
-
- 5) If replication is achieved, the next stage is usually that
- scientists attempt to design experiments that should be
- capable of _falsifying_ the original theory if they
- succeed (for example by showing that they are able
- to produce identical results using a different experimental
- procedure based upon an alternative theory). If falsification
- fails, the new theory is usually beginning to gain acceptance.
-
-
- Researchers within the Church of Scientology has -- as far as I know
- -- not even attempted to _write_ any reports following the accepted
- format for scientific papers, so the question of publication,
- replication and falsification is moot.
- --
- Meta-disclaimer: A society that needs disclaimers has too many lawyers.
-
- - gisle hannemyr (Norsk Regnesentral)
- OSI: C=no;PRMD=uninett;O=nr;S=Hannemyr;G=Gisle (X.400 SA format)
- gisle.hannemyr@nr.no (RFC-822 format)
- Inet: gisle@ifi.uio.no
- UUCP: ...!mcsun!ifi!gisle
- ------------------------------------------------
-