No he wasn't. The results were an accident - they initially surprised even Benveniste.
Your point here is absurd. Benveniste was
head of allergy and inflammation immunology at the French biomedical research agency INSERM - and he put a diluted remedy through an
allergy test. He was a scientist specializing in allergies testing allergies; Randi was a conjuror. Who was right? The scientist authority figure, of course, right? Oops no. Why?
Randi is an expert debunker of absurd claims. Benveniste was not. When Benveniste claimed water had memory (a claim that has nothing to do with immunology) he stepped right outside his scope of expertise and into Randi's.
Because his data was bad.
No, I didn't see Benveniste's data. I read Randi's report. I consider Randi to be an authority on the subject, so I accepted his conclusions over those of Benveniste.
So did you decide he was wrong because he has no qualifications in chemistry, or because he made an error? Which?
Randi made that decision, not me. My understanding is that Randi felt he was using an incorrect protocol at best, fabricating data at worst. ie: the data showed an effect, but the interpretation of an expert such as Randi sheds doubt. Randi's re-test was unsuccessful, but there is still a legacy of postive data to deal with.
My question still stands, though.
Wrong:
1902 23 June, [Einstein] starts provisional job at patent office: "Expert III Class." [Note -
third class.]
[FONT="][/FONT][FONT="]
"In little more than eight months in 1905 he completed five papers that would change the world for ever. "[/FONT]
And then:
1906 15 Jan, all formalities completed, [Einstein] becomes a Ph.D
Also, In
1906,
Einstein was promoted to technical examiner
second class.
So, he was hardly hired because he was an authority.[/quote]
Regardless of his PhD status, he was hired into a job that required physics expertise, and it's not a coincidence that the guy with a masters in physics - specifically electromagnetics - was hired to analyze such patents. Furthermore, in this environment, a guy with a masters in physics would have been part of the elite. The only reason he wasn't offered a professorship was because of personality conflicts with the faculty. A hundred years ago, a masters degree was quite the authority.
It's almost unbelieveble that I'm actually having to argue that Einstein's papers were accepted because they were good, rather than because he was an authority.
Well, you can sleep comfortably tonight, because that's not what I said. I believe my objection was with the suggestion that Einstein was some self-tutored maverick who came from the outside and took the physics establishment for some sort of right-angle-turn. It wasn't like that: he worked 'in his spare time' but not 'in secret'. He had access to feedback and resources from the world's leading minds on the subject: he was one of them.
One more time - the reviewers / people attempting replication are looking at the DATA.
Yes, experts. But your point was:
"Appeal to authority" is how science works..."
No it's not. I agree that non-experts should listen to the experts, and not make fools of themselves pretending they know more than they do. And that applies to scientists reading about subjects not in their area of expertise. But within a specialized area, the data counts.
Defending recognition of authority is an important part of a skeptic's job, because skepticism is aligned with the goals of science, where that is an instrumental part.
Organized Skepticism is asking those outside 'a specialized area' - ie: 99.9999999% of the world - to cultivate this. The article mentioned in the OP suggests this is a bad thing, and I'm trying to point out that it has worked very well for science so far, and that the erosion of regard for expertise undermines the institution of science, and diminishes the public's access to scientific advice.