Guest guest Posted December 10, 2007 Report Share Posted December 10, 2007 Excellent article by Webster (click on the Mark Blaxill links as well). …During a presentation at the National Autism Association's conference last month, Dr. Tom Insel, director of the National Institute of Mental Health, concluded his formal remarks by sharing with his audience the goals of science, as he and many of his fellow researchers at the National Institutes of Health see them. ***** (Insel) " One of the chief causes of poverty in science is imaginary wealth. The purpose of science is not to open the door to an infinitude of wisdom but set some limit to the infinitude of error. " - Brecht, Life of Gallileo Now, I started my remarks by telling you that we know a very small part of what we need to know. I would imagine it's under 10%. Many of you think you know the answers and we want to hear those. But I want you to understand that we set a very, very high bar in science - that most of what we do in science, as somebody once said, is " 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. " So, it takes three months to make a finding and ten years to try to falsify it before you really believe it. Some of you don't have ten years to wait. I understand that. But, our goal, here, is to make sure we do set a very high bar and that when we tell you something, it's something that we know can be replicated not just for your child, but for many, many other children, because there's a lot at stake. So, the idea of setting a limit on the infinitude of error is extremely important to us and is a sort of guiding principle to make sure that we are trying to test as many different ideas as possible, but putting a very high bar on what we would accept as a test of any given idea before we feel that it's proven. *********** Limiting the potential for error in science is, indeed, a lofty goal, but remember Dr. Brumback, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Child Neurology? In his note accompanying the erratum for the Ip et al article, Dr. Brumback states, " One of the philosophical myths associated with science is that invalid information published in scientific journals will be exposed by scientists who find that a particular study cannot be replicated. Unfortunately, this is rarely the case. " He continues, … " interest in replicating the published results is lacking because there is no glory in being the second person to describe a particular phenomenon, and research funding agencies (such as the US National Institutes of Health) do not provide grants to investigators wanting to confirm the results of other investigations. Thus, it is actually a fluke when problematic publications are identified. " So, errors in science are often missed because funding is rarely allocated to research designed to replicate a previously-obtained result. It's a " fluke " that DeSoto and Hitlan found these. This reality seems a far cry from the pristine world of science Dr. Insel describes. If limiting error is, truly, of utmost importance in science, we should expect to find a number of retractions and corrections following DeSoto and Hitlan's article. It's been three weeks and what have we heard? A flurry of short-lived posts by a few bloggers and that's about it. From officials in various government agencies cloaked in the mantle of science we've heard nothing but ear-splitting silence…. http://www.ageofautism.com/2007/12/the-ip-blip-and.html#more Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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