One of the evolutionist's favorite tactics is to immediately appeal to a "scientific consensus" that Evolution theory is beyond all reasonable doubt. If the vast majority of scientists accept Evolution theory (or more accurately, do not publicly oppose it) then it simply must be true. This reasoning is absurd on its face to any sophisticated reader,
Because it's not the reasoning at hand. The point being made is that here we have a complex scientific theory. There is a certain group of people particularly well-equipped to make judgment about this theory - they are people who have spent a lot of time studying and understanding all of the relevant information in the field. These people overwhelmingly accept the theory as valid, and reject the various complaints lodged at it. At that point, our opinion as laymen should be seriously tempered - who are we to say that we know more than them?
Your version of the argument is similar, but also ignores some important qualifications. We're not saying it has to be right, we're saying that unless we're willing to put in the legwork, we should consider our opinions rather unimportant by comparison. We're not saying all scientists, we're saying scientists with specific interest in the field. You wouldn't ask a dermatologist to examine your heart palpitations, and you wouldn't ask a mechanical engineer or computer scientist their professional opinion on the age of the earth. Because they don't have a professional opinion on the subject. They aren't qualified to offer any sort of professional opinion on it. For example, while I'm sure William Dempski is a fine mathematician, he has no qualifications to speak on natural selection or population dynamics.
First, think about how many popular-science presentations you've watched where you've been matter-of-factly assured that the Big Bang really happened and is beyond reasonable doubt. It is casually stated as if it were as clear as the sky is blue. Audiences are never given the slightest hint that anyone with relevant expertise questions whether or not the Big Bang really happened.
Because that would be presenting false balance.
Scientific consensus does not hinge on 100% acceptance. You can find geologists who deny plate tectonics; medical doctors who deny that HIV causes AIDS; historians who believe that the holocaust never happened. You name the field, you can find some crank with a relevant degree who believes something
completely crazy. Treating this fringe as though it was anything more than a fringe group is misrepresenting the state of the science.
And of course, popular science is just that - pop. It's for a layman audience. If I had to write a pop-sci piece on evolution, it would look very different from an entry in a peer-reviewed journal! The whole point of popular science is to entertain and educate, and going into the nuances of "there's a fringe minority that believes that none of this true" follows neither goal, unless your piece is about trouncing that fringe minority (which can be
very entertaining, as Poltholer54 proves on a regular basis).
Next, have a quick read through the following publication. (some technical jargon snipped)
An Open Letter to the Scientific Community
(Published in New Scientist, May 22, 2004)
http://homepages.xnet.co.nz/~hardy/cosmologystatement.html
Wait, hang on, I thought you were talking about evolution! That's a totally different field with its own problems. What does that have to do with biology?
However, this thread is not about debating the Big Bang theory. It is to shed light on the reality of "consensus" and the nature of the academic world in general.
Notice what is being expressed in the letter above, that a dominating theory is so entrenched, that scientists do not feel comfortable openly questioning it. Not because of the strength of evidence for the theory - (as stated they have sound scientific reasons for calling it into question) but because the theory is being protected ideologically. It is protected from question because so many parties are invested in it.
As much as this claim is made, the letter offers
no evidence to support it. Its author, Eric Lerner, belongs to the same fringe group as many citizen cosmologists here - he believes in an eternal universe based on plasma physics. It's no surprise that he'd try to explain away the failure of his theory to catch on by blaming bias within publishing, but he offers no evidence, and the 33 signatures he gathers is simply not impressive, regardless of how big the names are.
This paints quite a different picture than the mantras we hear day after day about how the consensus is based strictly on scientific merit, how scientists are eagerly waiting to have their theories disproved, how any young scientist who finds a hole in a reigning theory will be fast-tracked to a Nobel prize, etc. etc. This is all simply a myth that is perpetuated to give the scientific community an aura of righteousness and selfless pursuit of truth. It is simply not true.
Either that's a myth, and by the same token, the entire peer review system is corrupt and none of science (including medical science, mechanics, and the like) can be trusted...
Or Lerner's a crank who got a handful of frustrated physicists to cosign his letter. Or maybe he lied to them about the content - see also: "Dissent from Darwin". And it's not like we haven't had complaints like this in biology as well - "Expelled!" tried to ride this particular hobby-horse and failed
miserably.
Do you really think this level of ideological investment is not playing a role in maintaining the "consensus" and protecting the theory from question?
Interesting theory! Unfortunately, it sort of falls apart the moment you examine the evidence. For example,
this list. Scientists promoting intelligent design seem perfectly capable of publishing their research in peer-reviewed journals. It just hasn't gained much traction with anyone, because it's mostly junk science.
Do you really think the average young scientist trying to make a living feels comfortable openly questioning the theory, or even voicing the slightest hint of doubt?
Do you really think they're being honest and upfront with you about Evolution theory's weaknesses?
I think that conspiracy theories like this ignore the realities of scientific publishing. Every time cranks fail to get their ideas pushed to the forefront, their go-to response is to claim that the establishment has suppressed them. But it's not tenable.
My real wheelhouse, the area I consider myself most interested in and most qualified in, is medicine. I
love me some medicine. And in medical science, we have ways of doing things to ensure that treatments actually work, and aren't just attributable to placebo effects. There are a host of rules any study in medicine or toxicology should follow in order to be good research. And the
first thing cranks whose treatments don't work do when the science doesn't bear them out is complain about oppression. It's the same in virtually every field. Nobody is stopping Stanislaw Burzynski from publishing his incomplete trials, but nobody is going to take them seriously because they're just downright silly.
Similarly, nobody is stopping fellows of the discovery institute or other creationists from publishing work in their respective fields, but
nobody takes it seriously. Why? I wonder. It couldn't have anything to do with their claims being nonsensical to anyone who understands biology, could it?