I believe I have learnt a few things from this discussion.
It seems there is a tendancy for science to protect itself against change.
Part of this defensiveness manifests as a very real campaign to discredit authors who reveal dissenting information, rather than by simply pointing to the evidence.
This defensiveness also manifests as a very real campaign to stop others reading the works of the offending author. This can start as simply a refusal to publish. Alternative explanations, which misrepresent the views of the author are dreamt up to "debunk" the original work. This disuades the discerning individual from reading the original works.
The long term effect is that any body of evidence that contradicts the prevailing view is hidden from sight. Thus generation after generation of people are brought up educated with the prevailing view, with the dissenting results and opinions of others well out of their way.
I think the overall effect is to make science become a dogma, rather than an open-minded investigation.
It seems there is a tendancy for science to protect itself against change.
Part of this defensiveness manifests as a very real campaign to discredit authors who reveal dissenting information, rather than by simply pointing to the evidence.
This defensiveness also manifests as a very real campaign to stop others reading the works of the offending author. This can start as simply a refusal to publish. Alternative explanations, which misrepresent the views of the author are dreamt up to "debunk" the original work. This disuades the discerning individual from reading the original works.
The long term effect is that any body of evidence that contradicts the prevailing view is hidden from sight. Thus generation after generation of people are brought up educated with the prevailing view, with the dissenting results and opinions of others well out of their way.
I think the overall effect is to make science become a dogma, rather than an open-minded investigation.