Zeuzzz
Banned
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- Dec 26, 2007
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So let us look at the citations. Two are from him so they do not count. One is on z-pinches and the abstract does not mention cosmology (it has 96 citations since 2000). The other is on "renewal-at-π cosmology" which seems to present an alternative to all cosmologies (incliding plasma cosmology).
If you actually read this paper you would see that it is highly relevant to Peratts model, thus why the authors cite his work. They produce a quantitive model for Z-pinch scaleability in plasma, if that is not highly relevant and consistant with Peratts work, I dont know what is.
And there are far more than four citations, i dont know where you were looking up your citations, but the paper you claimed only had four citations has nineteen from what i've seen; http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/n...1986ITPS...14..639P&refs=CITATIONS&db_key=AST
and his second paper has fifteen; http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/n...1986ITPS...14..763P&refs=CITATIONS&db_key=AST
So not only are you making an argument on authority alone (without any reference to the science of why it is actually wrong) you are misrepresenting his material. And If you were to look at his other publications on this issue, not just two of his publications, you would find plenty more citations to his work from established scientists and journals, some published very recently. There seems to be increasing interest in this material now more scientists are becoming aware of it.
Whether the number of citations to an article means that (a) it is factually wrong (b) ignored (c) not understood (d) uncontested (e) unknown (f) politically unpopular , is open to speculation. Citations certainly don't imply veracity or disproof of the published science, though it may give an indication of popularity, which is hardly a scientific comment.
I note that Alfvén's original 1942 paper predicting hydromagnetic waves in Nature journal received only 1 citation in the first 10 years, and only 3 more in the next decade, and 3 more in the 10 years after that.
And Alfvén's article on the same subject in Arkiv f. Mat published in 1943, has received one citation to the article, ever.
Thanks Ian for pointing this out.
RealityCheck, Maybe you should contact all the scientists that cite his work and inform them of their mistake?
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