Zosimus
Non-Christian non-evolution believer
I'm going to have to shout a big BS on that one.Science can get wrong results due to mistakes in the experimentation process or data gathering process, unusual events distorting the results (if I make a study of average human height, my results will be skewed if I have several people from a pro-basketball team, as they tend to be rather taller than average and will thus increase the average height I get), improper calibration of scientific equipment, incorrect use of scientific equipment, contamination of samples, outside interference, inadequate isolation of variables.
But the cool thing about science is that it has mechanisms built in to get rid of these things. Scientists get others to go over their work, repeat their experiments and put their results to the test. If one scientist makes a mistake, or has the wrong equipment, or has a contaminated sample, chances are that most other scientists won't, so the error can be found.
http://www.nature.com/news/replication-studies-bad-copy-1.10634
QUOTE:
Daryl Bem, a social psychologist at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, showed student volunteers 48 words and then abruptly asked them to write down as many as they could remember. Next came a practice session: students were given a random subset of the test words and were asked to type them out. Bem found that some students were more likely to remember words in the test if they had later practised them. Effect preceded cause.
Bem published his findings in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (JPSP) along with eight other experiments1 providing evidence for what he refers to as “psi”, or psychic effects. There is, needless to say, no shortage of scientists sceptical about his claims....
Consider the aftermath of Bem's notorious paper. When the three groups who failed to reproduce the word-recall results combined and submitted their results for publication, the JPSP, Science and Psychological Science all said that they do not publish straight replications. The British Journal of Psychology sent the paper out for peer review, but rejected it. Bem was one of the peer reviewers on the paper. The beleaguered paper eventually found a home at PLoS ONE9, a journal that publishes all “technically sound” papers, regardless of novelty.
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I repeat again so you get the point:
the JPSP, Science and Psychological Science all said that they do not publish straight replications.
So if you think a study is wrong, you want to replicate it, and get published? Good luck with that!!!!
Science?! Self-correcting?! Don't make me laugh!
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