1/ I wager you trust the results you get from your spectrophotometer and if you get the same output from four different machines , on four independent samples you would be convinced that the spike you see really is the element it purports to be. The chances of error in that case are incredibly low.
The likely correctness of Routine test results ( when process qualified) are a whole different ball game from - your example of error - whether a new process achieves a new effect, or whether that is mistaken. The latter is primarily the role of university labs, not accredited routine testing.
I’m not knocking them generally , but university processes are not as secure as is needed in the bio pharmaceutical regulation world, ( or forensic world) horses and courses. University labs can’t afford the straight jacket, but make mistakes without it.
But be aware inadequately researched eurekas waste a lot of money , an experience you claim to share. (I have stated previously it was a biotech lab, that deals with bio pharmaceuticals, not small molecules. - a whole new layer of controls. Having to control living cell lines)
So it seems to me you are letting the question of whether you “like”the test results interfere with reasonable questioning of them. The results on EM simply define what is there.
It is A different ball game from creating a new chemical process, with far less room for error.
2/ perhaps read your own posts on “ false witness”.
I have not downplayed the question of comtamination at all. I have noted our lab controlled water, air filtration, particulates and pressure differences , qualified reagents , and autoclave everything. Systematic Cleaning occupied much of schedule time. All processes repeatedly test qualified. A thorough non conformance process and quality system. I have also noted that biopharm processes are about characterisation and control of impurities.
I simply put contamination in PROPER scientific context, which is by reference to the situation in which you raise it, and what matters in THIS case.
In all of these cases the tests indicated , recently live , traumatized heart myocardium when analysing the red areas of wafers. The test and identification of samples Is the kind of thing pathologists do every day.
The idea that identifiable myocardium can appear as a result of contamination is frankly farcical.
It is an unscientific suggestion. People or things do not spread heart myocardium. It kills a victim to extract it. Even if that was possible , random people have identifiable nuclear DNA, this did not.
So You have no credible hypothesis for how contamination can look like heart myocardium, in several different places, and no hypothesis for why no nuclear DNA identity was found , if it was a result contamination. That was my objection. Your reference to comtamination is therefore a red herring in this context.
These tests are stating what is there, using standard technique. That the situation where they are found is unusual , does not falsify test results.
Contamination is a typical off the shelf accusations levelled at any phenomena , like “ substitution” or conspiracy, or “ the church did it” without any thought for how that may apply in practice in specific cases to arrive at false results.
Focus. How can contamination produce samples that are identifiable as heart myocardium?
3/ without reading the books you won’t know what is in them.
Do you disdain books about chemistry too?
In a book, I am presently reading a cardiologists opinion of the balance of types of white cells found in the Buenos airies phenomena.
There are several types that kick in during different stages of an inflammatory response. The balance seen in the EM is unusual and in his view is typical of physical trauma, in a healthy person it is a dysfunction. That is a scientific view by an expert in the field . He presents references to studies of those topics. He is also critical of some of the testing indicating that some records on the earlier Buenos airies miracles were not good enough. There were several EM around that time, in addition to the one you are aware of.
So discounting them without reading the books IS unscientific.
You will never have a valid opinion either for or against these until you study what is known of them.
I will readily agree that labs operating with set SOP's and controls can be very good. But your antagonism toward "university labs" is not warranted.
What kind of lab was it that you started?
It is about you in no small way. You are fiercely defending miracles that confirm CATHOLIC doctrine. Does that not surprise you that you accidentally wound up in the ONLY TRUE FAITH? You are quite fortunate that you happened to, late in life, stumble upon the only faith that is true while the countless billions of people who are not of that faith are doomed to damnation.
The reason it is important is summarized thusly:
1. Your primary defense of the analyses has nothing to do with the actual statistics of the measurements but rather with the fact that there were different labs and you have an inherent trust of contract labs and trade books from the book store.
2. You refuse to consider the concept of "contamination" (even when the articles you favor explicitly discuss this topic) and call it any number of names.
3. You claim to have scientific experience, scientific "breakthroughs" from your research and even started a lab! But you don't speak in any way like an actual scientist. You mock any potential error in the findings as absurd when, in fact, a real scientist ALWAYS allows that error could be in there. The only people who dispense with any discussion of error are non-scientists. It's literally the most important thing we are taught as scientists.
Here's what it looks like to me:
You are a good Catholic. You believe and that is fantastic. You happened to find some books that sound to you like they found evidence of miracles. Maybe they did, maybe not. The fact that it confirms your faith is sufficient for you. That's fantastic. Seriously, it is great. I am happy for you.
The real problem is you seem to want to talk about these things as if you are speaking from a position of science. Not so much. Yes you have your favorite data in hand (or at least what some author opted to give you) and you don't like it when anyone fails to be moved by that set of data. Meanwhile those of us who actually have worked in science know from personal experience that not all things are as they seem from a few experiments or analyses.
I am not saying, nor have I EVER said these miracles are not real. I will repeat that so you will have to go out of your way to ignore it: I have not said that these miracles are not real. They may very well be real. I am not at a point where I will drop my skepticism. Your bar for rejecting the null hypothesis is much, much lower than mine.