vossler
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- Jul 20, 2004
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How about make sure they were right? Remember all these "findings" came from a single tooth. How can any body that identifies itself as "scientific" make such a incredible assertion and then be surprised when found to be false that they're not considered fraudulent?gluadys said:It certainly was not fraud. There was no attempt at deceit. Osborne never claimed the tooth was human, although he did think it was from a higher primate. But both he and every other scientist associated with it agreed that a proper identification could not be make without further evidence. The reason it took five years to come to a conclusive decision, is that the further evidence was not discovered for five years.
On the contrary it shows just what we expect of scientists. Not one scientist made a positive claim that the tooth was human. Even the most enthusiastic proponent of a human identification agreed it was not possible to do more than speculate until a positive identification could be made. The drawing was clearly labelled as imaginative and never had any scientific standing. And when the needed evidence showed up and the tooth was correctly identified as from a peccary, this was promptly publicized and the tooth reclassified.
I see no evidence of either low standards or fraud in this history. A tentative identification was made that the tooth was primate (not human), but held, even by Osburne himself, to be speculative pending new evidence. And when new evidence showed the true derivation of the tooth, the scientific community acted quickly to re-classify it, and to publicize the new evidence and the new identification of the tooth.
What else would you expect them to do, either in 1922 or in 1927?
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