I really wasn't "eyeballing" the data. I looked through many pages of seemingly random graphs and picked two that looked particularly relevant to our discussion.
One showed that measurements of the speed of light were changing in the past but have apparently stopped changing (in direct correlation to our measurement accuracy). The other showed that halflives seem to have been changing (our measurements of them) but not all in the same direction.
Are these not important points that deserve response? Or is it your intention to throw out the work of a scientist that you don't understand and then refuse to back up his conclusions when somebody finds a problem with the data?
No, I don't there is really much response to give. "Convenience" really bespeaks "eyeballing." This is a complex matter with lots of issues. You pick a suspicious trend without analyzing the data and ignored reams of information. If you have data that proves something wrong, that would be more useful for discussion.
You talk about throwing out 200 years of science. Well, no one is disputing that this work is "edgy." To some that means nutty to some it means innovative. But, dealing with such unusual thinking is usually much harder to refute than conventional views. That is certainly "inconvenient." But, convenience does not change the task if you are going to assume it.
Semelweis was also called a nut because he was dealing with germs no one had yet seen. While the analogy is not perfect, I think there are assumptions that we really have seen the stuff that Setterfield is talkign about. Thus, he is called a nut. But, that just doesn't seem to be the case. Science needs puzzling quantities like quarks, singularities and quantum holes to deal with phenomena that are probably not understood any better than ghosts. You can model it, but do you understand it? There are huge fights about the nature of "dark matter" and string theory. Yes, it take genius to model and examine these issues. But, we are talking about the fundamentals of the cosmos and people can't agree on what's real and what isn't. I don't think the Semelweis analogy is farfetched at all. That is a circumstance which bears a little more reserve.
The 200 years of science that you wish to protect has already hit a number of very considerable walls.
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