Let's try this again....
Jodie, I'm a practicing paleontologist. This is what I do for a living. I want you to think about that for a moment: you are arguing about how to do paleontology, with someone who does it. You should really consider whether you or I has more knowledge about this sort of thing.
Jodie said:
Then what is peer review if not a consensus?
Peer review determines if a paper is worthy of adding to the centuries-long conversation that is science. It has nothing to do with consensus. The reviewers don't even have to agree--and often they don't. It's a cliche joke that you'll get one reviewer telling you to do one thing and another telling you the exact opposite. Also, even if they all agree it's only a consensus in the most pedantic definition of the term, as there are only a few reviewers for any paper--two or three, for the papers I've worked on.
I never disagreed with your arguments for no fossilized evidence in NA.
True. You've simply stated that my entire profession was incompetent at assessing any such remains, that we guess at which characters to use for taxonomy, that we're cowards unable to stand on the conviction of our own analysis, etc.
I'm merely pointing out how you are coming across. If you did not intend to say those things, I recommend revising a few statements.
Has this been debunked? I live close to this area and might arrange to take a day to go check it out if it hasn't.
Please don't.
If you found something recently dead that didn't fit, my first thought would be that it was artificially introduced, or ask if it is a normal variation of something already existsing, etc... questions have to be answered before you jump the gun.
Do you honestly think that no biologist or paleontologist considers such things? How do you imagine we do field work? Establishment of provenance is absolutely critical for our work. For recently dead things, it's not terribly difficult, even if there are reasonable doubts as to the provenance--dental and hair microchemistry analysis can tell us quite precisely where the organism lived, and stomach contents can tell us if it's been feeding in the area or not. This isn't rocket science, nor is it something that any competent scientist would fail to do upon finding a bigfoot carcass.
Professional scientists--and in particular field workers--are not amateurs bumbling around in the woods for an afternoon. Believe it or not, we have actually considered these concepts in the past 300 to 500 years (depending on how you count it).
As for fossils, it's not likely you would find a complete skeleton of anything, so sure, you need second opinions.
I invite you to read through some of the literature on the taxonomy of mammal fossils. You are so wrong it's not even funny. We're talking "The Earth is flat" levels of wrong here. Plus, I've already addressed the "second opinion" nonsense. Please actually take the time to consider what I've said before repeating rubbish I've already addressed.
If you pass peer review does that not mean the conclusions are correct until someone repeats what you did?
Completely wrong. If no one can reproduce your results, sure, that means you're wrong; however, there are no labs reproducing biological or paleontological experiments as their main activity (which would be necessary for your statements to be true). If bigfoot were found there would be intense analysis of the creature by pretty much every field of biological science; however, they'd each do their own analysis. While these analyses would overlap, few would be direct reproductions and then they'd only be so if there was some reason to doubt the original work.
In this case we are using the fresh dead animal as an example, now other than ID'ing the thing through morphology, DNA, trying to figure out where it came from, one person isn't going to dictate those conclusions.
Perhaps. Of course, each scientist is obligated to arrive at their own conclusions, based on the evidence they find. So while there may be a consensus eventually, it's utterly irrelevant to practicing scientists in the relevant fields. The ONLY factor worthy of consideration is the evidence. The consensus is only of use to people with no expertise in the field and who are not able to evaluate the data on their own. There's no shame in that, by the way--science, even the sub-branches of it--is simply too complex for anyone to master all the nuances of. But you are deeply mistaken if you think that the consensus is something scientists in the field actually pay attention to. We don't. We look at the data. The consensus is something other people compile; we're too busy advancing human understanding. On the cutting edge there
is no consensus.