To get back to the original topic of this thread, which is whether or not our work in focus fusion is either a fraud or, as Ben m says ”crackpot”. If we get away from the kindergarten-level name-calling-- “you’re crazy!”-- which is literally what crackpot means, the real question is how do you tell if a line of research is legitimate science or pseudoscience, something which is not science at all?
A lot on this thread makes the false syllogism:” Pseudoscience is rejected by almost all scientists in the field. Unpopular scientific ideas are (by definition) rejected by almost all scientists in the field. Therefore all unpopular scientific ideas are pseudoscience." I hope when spelled out like this, the failure of the logic is clear. No, not all unpopular ideas are pseudoscience and not all of them are even wrong.
If you reject this premise, then you end up with orthodoxy—the majority opinion is always right—which is death to scientific progress.
So how do you really tell pseudoscience from real science, which can be right or wrong? Well, here are my ideas: (Jean Tate, I just noticed I could post websites) If you look at those criteria, you can see why our focus fusion research could never be judged as pseudoscience, no matter how unlikely you think our success might be.
The second point I want to make is that Ben m is wrong in his assertion that our basic model(which is Bostick’s basic model) is even unpopular in the field today. I have not noticed Ben m admitting his error here even though I’ve provided the citations.
This is a good example of how it is totally wrong to confuse unpopularity with lack of scientific rigor. In the 1970’s Bostick’s and Nardi’s theories about plasmoids were unpopular. But not only was it good science, they were right. It took 30 years for it to be accepted, but it happened. (By the way Bostick, while having an unpopular idea, was always respected by his colleagues. He was Chairman of the Physics Department at Stevens Institute for many years and you don’t get to head a department at a major institution without the respect of your colleagues.)
A lot on this thread makes the false syllogism:” Pseudoscience is rejected by almost all scientists in the field. Unpopular scientific ideas are (by definition) rejected by almost all scientists in the field. Therefore all unpopular scientific ideas are pseudoscience." I hope when spelled out like this, the failure of the logic is clear. No, not all unpopular ideas are pseudoscience and not all of them are even wrong.
If you reject this premise, then you end up with orthodoxy—the majority opinion is always right—which is death to scientific progress.
So how do you really tell pseudoscience from real science, which can be right or wrong? Well, here are my ideas: (Jean Tate, I just noticed I could post websites) If you look at those criteria, you can see why our focus fusion research could never be judged as pseudoscience, no matter how unlikely you think our success might be.
The second point I want to make is that Ben m is wrong in his assertion that our basic model(which is Bostick’s basic model) is even unpopular in the field today. I have not noticed Ben m admitting his error here even though I’ve provided the citations.
This is a good example of how it is totally wrong to confuse unpopularity with lack of scientific rigor. In the 1970’s Bostick’s and Nardi’s theories about plasmoids were unpopular. But not only was it good science, they were right. It took 30 years for it to be accepted, but it happened. (By the way Bostick, while having an unpopular idea, was always respected by his colleagues. He was Chairman of the Physics Department at Stevens Institute for many years and you don’t get to head a department at a major institution without the respect of your colleagues.)