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The comparison to jabberwocky is inevitable

Category: AcademicsBad scienceKooks
Posted on: January 27, 2012 12:35 PM, by PZ Myers

Lots of people have been sending me this paper by Erik Andrulis, and most of you have done so with eyebrows raised, pointing out that it's bizarre and unbelievable; some of you wrote asking whether it was believable, at which point my eyebrows went up. Come on people: when you see one grand cosmic explanation that is summarized with cartoons, which the author claims explains everything from the behavior of subatomic particles to the formation of the moon, shouldn't you immediately sense crankery?

It's also getting cited all over the place, from World of Warcraft fan sites to the Discovery Institute (those two have roughly equal credibility in matters of science), so I had to skim through it. I read it with rising concern: Erik Andrulis is a young assistant professor at Case Western Reserve University, and he's published entirely sensible papers on RNA processing. This paper is so weird and out there that it is either an attempt to Sokal the field of origins of life research, or the man is seriously mentally ill. Either way, this is not going to help his career in the slightest.

The paper is titled Theory of the Origin, Evolution, and Nature of Life, and just the sweeping grandiosity of that title should set off alarm bells. Here is the abstract:

Life is an inordinately complex unsolved puzzle. Despite significant theoretical progress, experimental anomalies, paradoxes, and enigmas have revealed paradigmatic limitations. Thus, the advancement of scientific understanding requires new models that resolve fundamental problems. Here, I present a theoretical framework that economically fits evidence accumulated from examinations of life. This theory is based upon a straightforward and non-mathematical core model and proposes unique yet empirically consistent explanations for major phenomena including, but not limited to, quantum gravity, phase transitions of water, why living systems are predominantly CHNOPS (carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur), homochirality of sugars and amino acids, homeoviscous adaptation, triplet code, and DNA mutations. The theoretical framework unifies the macrocosmic and microcosmic realms, validates predicted laws of nature, and solves the puzzle of the origin and evolution of cellular life in the universe.

Having skimmed through all 105 pages of this thing, I can tell you with confidence that it answers none of those questions. Just the fact that it is entirely non-mathematical and non-empirical (there aren't any observations or experiments described at all), and that the entirety of the theory is built around diagrams sketched out by the author, should also tell you that this is not a useful or predictive theory.

It does not have an auspicious beginning. In addition to being constructed around cartoons and being a non-mathematical Theory of Everything, it has to introduce an elaborate collection of neologisms that make the whole paper painful to read.

In the theory proposed herein, I use the heterodox yet simple gyre--a spiral, vortex, whorl, or similar circular pattern--as a core model for understanding life. Because many elements of the gyre model (gyromodel) are alien, I introduce neologisms and important terms in bold italics to identify them; a theoretical lexicon is presented in Table 1. The central idea of this theory is that all physical reality, stretching from the so-called inanimate into the animate realm and from micro- to meso- to macrocosmic scales, can be interpreted and modeled as manifestations of a single geometric entity, the gyre. This entity is attractive because it has life-like characteristics, undergoes morphogenesis, and is responsive to environmental conditions. The gyromodel depicts the spatiotemporal behavior and properties of elementary particles, celestial bodies, atoms, chemicals, molecules, and systems as quantized packets of information, energy, and/or matter that oscillate between excited and ground states around a singularity. The singularity, in turn, modulates these states by alternating attractive and repulsive forces. The singularity itself is modeled as a gyre, thus evincing a thermodynamic, fractal, and nested organization of the gyromodel. In fitting the scientific evidence from quantum gravity to cell division, this theory arrives at an understanding of life that questions traditional beliefs and definitions.

Here's a partial copy of his lexicon. It goes on quite a bit longer than what I've copied here.

Table 1. Gyromodel Lexicon

AlternagyreA gyrosystem whose gyrapex is not triquantal
DextragyreA right-handed gyre or gyromodel
FocagyreA gyre that is the focal point of analysis or discussion
GyradaptorThe gyre singularity--a quantum--that exerts all forces on the gyrosystem
GyrapexThe relativistically high potential, excited, unstable, learning state of a particle
GyraxiomA fact, condition, principle, or rule that constrains and defines the theoretical framework
GyreThe spacetime shape or path of a particle or group of particles; a quantum
GyrequationShorthand notation for analysis, discussion, and understanding gyromodels
GyrobaseThe relativistically low potential, ground, stable, memory state of a particle
GyrognosisThe thermodynamically demanding process of learning and integrating IEM
GyrolinkThe mIEM particle that links two gyromodules in a gyronexus
GyromnemesisThe thermodynamically conserving process of remembering and recovering IEM
GyromodelThe core model undergirding the theoretical framework
GyromoduleA dIEM particle in a gyronexus
GyronexusA polymer of dIEM particles linked by mIEM particles
GyrostateThe potential and/or kinetic state that a particle occupies in its gyratory path
GyrosystemA gyromodel with specific IEM composition, organization, and purpose
IEMInformation, energy, and/or matter

I can't help myself. You knew this was coming.

Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe:
All mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe.

Now I know that you are in lexical shock right now, but I'm about to make it worse. Witness the use of these terms in figure 1 of the paper, which will also reveal the kinds of diagrams he's using.

gyrefig.jpeg

"The levorafocagyre, in turn, is antichiral to the dextrasupragyre" is a nice sentence that about sums up the experience of reading this thing. Don't believe me? Here are more excerpts that illustrate the grand, cosmic, and entirely uninformative nature of gyroexplanatory gyrobabble. Andrulis purports to explain everything from learning and memory (learning and memory by gyres, not the poor people trying to understand his paper):

The ultimate state of gyromnemesis is the stably adapted particle or gyronexus in the gyrobase. A particle thus adapts through learning and memory by completing one full cycle--a revolution-- around the singularity. Taken together, gyrognosis defines IEM integration and assessment whereas gyromnemesis defines IEM storage and recovery. Finally, although a diquantal IEM (X'') undergoes gyrognosis as the gyrobase of a primary majorgyre, it undergoes gyromnemesis as the gyrapex of an alternagyre. Thus, gyre learning and memory are relative to the gyradaptive singularity.

To the formation of Earth's moon:

Lunar Formation. The favored hypothesis for the formation of Earth's Moon is from planetesimal impact on a proto-Earth proceeded by matter ejection, accretion, and gravitational capture [189,190]. However, the question of lunar origin has not been settled since there are competing, albeit antiquated hypotheses [191,192]. I also discovered the stunning admission that, "...shamefacedly, [astronomers] have little idea as to where [the Moon] came from. This is particularly embarrassing... [193]." The oxygyre models the Moon as a macroxyon that has a macroelectron within itself; this simple gyrosystem accounts for the known chemical composition of the Moon surface, oxides [194]. Regarding lunar origin, the macroxyon that is the Moon emerges from the macroelectron that is the Earth, concomitant with the emergence of Earth's macroxyon [195,196].

Several additional points can be derived from this gyrosystem. First, the oxygyre explains water on and in the Moon [197-199]. Second, the gyrating effects of the macroxygyre model the rotation of the Moon on its axis. Third, the path of a less exergic macroxyon (Moon) around more exergic one (Earth) follows an ohiogyre path, or lunar orbit. Fourth, this oxygyre provides insight into how tidal cycling is linked to lunar orbit and axial rotation [200] since the Earth's oceans (macroxymatrix) and Moon itself (a macroxyon) exert complementary attractorepulsive forces. Fifth, this theoretical union also helps clarify short-term chronobiological ([201]; see 3.8) and long-term geophysical [202] relationships. Sixth, the craters that cover planetary, lunar, and satellite surfaces [203-205]--most if not all of which are near-perfect circles--bear the signature of the macroelectron singularity and its strong thermodynamic force on the oxygyre [206].

You know what? That doesn't explain anything!

While the strange terminology and nonsensical claims could be clues that this is an elaborate Poe of some sort, the story I've heard from some other sources is that Andrulis is not getting tenure and will be leaving Case next year, and that he seems to have a history of tuning in and out — so what this most like is is a developing personal tragedy. I hope he gets the care he clearly needs; his other work suggests that this is an intelligent mind that is currently going off the rails.

Setting Andrulis aside, though, there are other problems here. How did this paper get published? It's terrible: unreadable, incoherent, bizarre, and completely lacking in evidence or mathematical support. This is from the very first issue of a new journal, Life, which also contains a perfectly reasonable general summary of origins of life research by Stuart Kauffman alongside Andrulis's ghastly dreck. There seems to be a complete lack of editorial discrimination at the journal; this is not the way to build a reputation. Or rather, it is, but not a desirable one.

And then there is Science Daily, which seems to be the source where most of my correspondents found this paper. Science Daily is an incredibly annoying source: all they do is republish, without any kind of intelligent assessment, press releases. They suck. What good is mindless regurgitation?

And finally, there's Case Western Reserve University, which must bear a share of the blame. Where did the press release come from? Why, from the Media Relations office at CWRU. Somebody wrote the press release that begins like this:

The earth is alive, asserts a revolutionary scientific theory of life emerging from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. The trans-disciplinary theory demonstrates that purportedly inanimate, non-living objects--for example, planets, water, proteins, and DNA--are animate, that is, alive. With its broad explanatory power, applicable to all areas of science and medicine, this novel paradigm aims to catalyze a veritable renaissance.

It's madness stamped with the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine seal of approval. If Andrulis did Sokal the journal, he also Sokal'ed the institution that employs him. Who wrote that bullshit? Do they have anyone competent review their press releases before they mail them out to the whole wide world? Was there anyone thinking in all the steps from crank professor to PR department to journal editor to reviewers? There were so many points where this crackpottery should have been detected and rejected, and it didn't happen.

(Also on FtB)

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Comments

#1

Posted by: TheThingISentYou Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 12:54 PM

"It's also getting cited all over the place, from World of Warcraft fan sites to the Discovery Institute (those two have roughly equal credibility in matters of science)"

I think you're being unfair to WoW fan sites. You can find plenty of good empirical research on those places describing loot drop distributions and raid boss behavioral studies.

#2

Posted by: danlwarren Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 1:03 PM

I was already sick of Science Daily just because it is, as you say, an unfiltered hosepipe of only-occasionally-interesting research, but republishing crap like this is just inexcusable.

#3

Posted by: Orac Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 1:15 PM

This seriously reminds me of Lionel Milgrom's stuff. (Just type his name into the ScienceBlogs search box, and you'll come across a couple of blog posts I did about him. You'll see what I mean.)

In any case, I saw this paper too, but haven't had the guts to read it yet (or even skim it). The reason I fear it is because, well, I did my surgery residency at Case Western Reserve University, and I also got my PhD from a basic science department within the CRWU School of Medicine. My wife got her undergraduate chemistry degree from Case. So both my wife and I have strong connections to CWRU, even though we haven't lived in Cleveland in over 15 years.

Better to admit these embarrassing facts in the comment section of a blog somewhere, even one as popular as Pharyngula, rather than on my own blog. On the other hand, Case did host the Society for Integrative Oncology annual meeting in November; so since we left Cleveland, Case has apparently gone woo. :-(

#4

Posted by: kaylakaze Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 1:15 PM

Anyone who has read Junji Ito's Uzumaki knows what's wrong with this guy.

#5

Posted by: PZ Myers Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 1:20 PM

Ah, you just have a vested interest in not advertising the fact that your alma mater is fetid incubator of appalling woo.

(Also, Mano Singham at FtB is a physicist at CWRU. Must be only wacky people at that place).

#6

Posted by: Sepia Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 1:35 PM

It really does look like an elaborate hoax, especially if (as you say) the guy's got nothing but perfectly sensible articles published elsewhere. Of course, this might just call into question the veracity of his other works...

#7

Posted by: RBH Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 1:36 PM

If Andrulis did Sokal the journal, he also Sokal'ed the institution that employs him.
I've always wanted a gyrocopter.

Yesterday I corresponded with a biologist friend at CWRU who's talked with Andrulis. I'm assured that it's not a Sokal, that Andrulis really means it.

#8

Posted by: Amphiox, OM Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 2:35 PM

re@1;

It has been said that the best MMORPG players are actually functioning as very competent practical scientists, with respect to figuring out the mechanics of the game world, and on their forums have for all intents and purposes recapitulated the entire scientific method, right down to distribution of results and peer review....

#9

Posted by: Pyrrhonic Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 4:41 PM

Who knew W.B. Yeats was so prescient!

#10

Posted by: kimbrunnen Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 6:06 PM

Was it just too long for JIR?

#11

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 6:12 PM

The whole thing sounds like Stuart Pivar and John A. Davison got together and created an artificial love child, who then wrote this paper.

#12

Posted by: rsabbatini Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 6:45 PM

Try psychiatry, remember John Nash. This seems to be a simple case of paranoid/megalomania schizophrenia, expressed as convoluted, pseudo-rational, and totally unreal thinking. Only the author believes that it makes sense. As an associated editor of a brain & mind jounal, I used to get several paper submissions like this every year. The mania phase of bipolar disease may also manifest itself in intellectuals in this form of all-encompassing, fantastic theories of everything. The author is easily treated, the bizarre thing to explain, really, is how the journal that publish it could fall for this.

#13

Posted by: SillyPutty Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 6:53 PM

Is Andrulis going to publish an explanation of Dark Matter?

#14

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 7:16 PM

Try psychiatry, remember John Nash. This seems to be a simple case of paranoid/megalomania schizophrenia, expressed as convoluted, pseudo-rational, and totally unreal thinking.

It does have a lot of similarity to other writings I have seen from known mild schizophrenics.

#15

Posted by: 'Tis Himself, OM Author Profile Page | January 27, 2012 10:12 PM

Not being a psychologist I'm not going to comment on Andrulis' mental state other than to say he appears to be, in technical terms, stark-staring bonkers.

#16

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 2:56 AM

Is Andrulis going to publish an explanation of Dark Matter?

negative inverse-gyre.

#17

Posted by: maria.phillis Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 4:38 AM

Oh dear, that's my undergraduate alma mater - at least he will not be receiving tenure.

#18

Posted by: Stephen_P Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 5:19 AM

Not a spoof, I'm fairly sure. It reminds me of a lot of the stuff in Martin Gardner's Fads and Fallacies. Or indeed Stuart Pivar, as Ichthyic mentioned.

#19

Posted by: dokerr Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 6:33 AM

This guy used to haunt a science forum that I frequent. I think he must have been using as guinea-pigs. His threads always ended up in the pseudoscience section.

#20

Posted by: a neuroscientist Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 12:02 PM

Hello PZ. Who pi--ed in your corn flakes about this paper? Your vitriolic discussion at best displays immense pettiness and if your worst suspicions of mental illness are true could actually cause greater harm. You’ve really crossed the line here with your unethical digging into the personal life of the author and publishing those details on your blog. In the time it took you to craft your response, couldn’t you have been doing something useful for science like writing a paper or grant, grading some undergrads biology essay or debunked some ID crank?

BTW, who appointed you the “defender of the faith” on this issue? If this theory is wrong the scientific enterprise will perfectly well defend itself as it always has: through hypothesis driven experimentation followed by peer-reviewed publication. Why don’t you put your money where your mouth is and design an experiment that will disprove even a single aspect of the theory and publish your rebuttal in LIFE? This would be a better option than your non-peer reviewed blog posts.

#21

Posted by: 'Tis Himself, OM Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 12:34 PM

a neuroscientist #20

Please show where PZ did "unethical digging into the personal life of the author." All PZ did was quote from the paper and from a press release issued by Andrulis's university.

#22

Posted by: a neuroscientist Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 12:41 PM

The comments on tenure status are at best hearsay and are certainly personal in nature.

#23

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 1:19 PM

who appointed you the "defender of the faith" on this issue?

are you shitting me?

READ THE PAPER.

Oh, wait, you're a crank.

that would explain it alrighty.


#24

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 1:24 PM

...If YOU are one of the morons who secretly have been egging Andrulis on in this "endeavor", know this:

essentially what you have done is the equivalent to enabling an alcoholic by telling them their extreme drinking binges are really inspiring.

You're the one doing extreme harm to this person, not the whistleblowers.

and Life? are you kidding me? that thing isn't a journal.

the only thing that surprises me about it is how they managed to actually use "Life" as the title without violating some copyright somewhere.

#25

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 2:19 PM

from the main Pharyngula site:

http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2012/01/27/the-comparison-to-jabberwocky-is-inevitable/comment-page-1/#comment-254347

I have spent the last 7 years or so working on a complete and consistent theory of the universe. I initially started out with a book, but that was a tough sell. So, I compiled a book proposal. That proposal was rejected by ~30 different publishing houses. I then tried literary agents. ~200 rejections ensued. I pared my theory down to a scientific manuscript that addresses topics ranging from quantum gravity to the origin and nature of cellular life. That manuscript was sent to and through 12 different peer-reviewed journals and article servers (arXiv) — where I had 4 decision appeals, 15 total rejections, and 1 retraction.

uh huh.

#26

Posted by: a neuroscientist Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 3:04 PM

@ Ichthyic

I don’t really care what is in the paper as I’m absolutely confident that the self-correcting nature of science will either chew up and spit out pseudo-science in a peer-reviewed fashion or ignore it entirely…….all in a manner that will not utilize non-peer reviewed attacks, bring attention to the pseudo-science and perhaps create a pseudo-science martyr. Like I said, a few hours spent positively contributing to science would have time better spent than the main blog post.

#27

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 3:25 PM

I don't really care what is in the paper

then you have no business claiming to even use the word "scientist" in your nym.

you're completely clueless.

completely.

#28

Posted by: PZ Myers Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 3:28 PM

I wrote to several people at Case; I've also since heard from others who know him. What I've heard over and over is serious concern that he's showing signs of mental illness, and hope that he gets treatment. The content of this paper is also suggestive.

Your belief in the "self-correcting nature of science" is very amusing. Science, as you might guess, is an abstract process describing activities carried out by people, and the "self-correction" is carried out by people speaking up and criticizing errors. It is not magic. It actually does require participants in the enterprise of science to engage with the literature, good and bad, and assess it openly.

Your pompous insistence that the only proper response to bad science is to close your eyes and pretend it didn't happen is both naive and antithetical to progress.

#29

Posted by: Amphiox, OM Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 3:44 PM

Like I said, a few hours spent positively contributing to science would have time better spent than the main blog post.

The main blog post IS a positive contribution to the process of science.

That you in your overweening pompousness have failed to recognize this simple fact suggests a serious degree of Dunning-Kruger in your selection of a 'nym.

#30

Posted by: marc.k.mielke Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 5:35 PM

I am now hungry for Gyros.

#31

Posted by: David Marjanović Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 7:23 PM

Jesus.
Haploid.
Christ.

0.9 Tc.

Chorus: Ecce homo, qui est faba...

Funny but horrible. Andrulis needs help. Immediate, professional help.

#32

Posted by: a neuroscientist Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 8:05 PM

So is the opportunity to refute a two-bit paper that ultimately will have no scientific impact can be so enticing that it is worth the risk of “piling on” a potentially mentally ill person? What an interesting ethical choice. I also hope professional help is on the way.

#33

Posted by: Owlmirror Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 8:54 PM

So is the opportunity to refute a two-bit paper that ultimately will have no scientific impact

The problem is not so much its non-existent impact, but the failure of scientific review in the publication and publicization of the paper.

can be so enticing that it is worth the risk of "piling on" a potentially mentally ill person?

Do you think that potential mental illness should be ignored?

#34

Posted by: colleentanner2 Author Profile Page | January 28, 2012 10:04 PM

So is the opportunity to refute a two-bit paper that ultimately will have no scientific impact can be so enticing that it is worth the risk of “piling on” a potentially mentally ill person?

Well stated, but I think your propositions are really a matter of intent here. Although PZ's post may not have considerable impact on the scientific community, in the least it appeals to a broader audience, which although not particularly qualified when compared to academic professionals (I don't actually know the proportions of scientist and non-scientist followers here...), still may impact the perceived credibility of the paper and the journal that published it, thereby affecting the scientific review process. Whether or not you admit it, social media does indeed play a role in science (and yes, often times in detrimental ways).

But the way I see it, PZ's role as a blogger is multi-faceted. True, he could have better spent his time working to dispel the papers preposterous claims in more scientific ways, just as you could have better spent your time doing something besides criticizing a pointless criticism......but really how PZ spends his time is up to him. And honestly, I love the entertainment. Isn't that a major reason why most of us come here anyways? To see not only the science and information about what's going on, but also the humor? For the raging comment wars? And the fun of scientific debate? I mean the author of the paper apparently needs professional help, which is not very funny, but the fact that the paper was at all published makes it fair game as a target for ruthless scrutiny. And how could you not crack a smile at the comparison? The Jabberwocky? xD

#35

Posted by: Gholson Lyon Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 4:26 AM

Hello, this is maybe the second time I have ever read anything on Pharyngula, as I was only pointed to this website by a posting over at Retraction Watch. Given the tone of the above comments, I have decided to register and cross-post my same comment that I also just sent to Retraction Watch. Here it is:

Hello, I am a psychiatrist who also does research. There is a long history of scientists (brilliant and otherwise) who become mentally ill at various points in time. There is also a long, documented history of great discoveries and/or masterworks being produced by individuals during periods of manic-depressive illness and/or schizophrenia. See here for some unusually ill geniuses:
http://www.cracked.com/article_16559_7-eccentric-geniuses-who-were-clearly-just-insane.html

I do not know the details of this particular case, but my initial reading of some of the quotes in this paper, as cited above, along with the post from Pinko Punko (at Retraction Watch), make me suspect that this particular individual has likely entered into a period of mania or psychoses. This is a sad, unfortunate occurrence that can happen to anyone, for many reasons, both genetic and/or environmental. I hope that this individual can return to both a good life and a productive scientific career. We need such people to advance science, medicine and humanity.

#36

Posted by: Patche Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 7:14 AM

Maybe he is angling for an IgNoble, the bullshit is about right

#37

Posted by: Ludus Lullus Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 2:11 PM

It still looks like an elaborate Poe/Sokal/turboencabulator hoax to me.

It contains some subtle and not-so-subtle references/apparent spoofs on string theory and whether the latter is falsifiable (e.g. the 'not even wrong' debate); just replace the word gyre by string).

E.g. section 2.1.2 "... Given gyre spontaneity, the precise
spatiotemporal coordinates of gyre emergence or trajectory are unpredictable. Likewise, accurately predicting gyre strength and composition is beyond current scientific techniques..."

Furthermore, someone who comes up with things like

"antichiral Matrioshkagyres" (and the entire Figure 1 caption)

"In conclusion, this catholic theory provides an innovative and elegant solution to the origin, evolution, and nature of life in the cosmos."(while using 'catholic' in the old Greek meaning of 'universal')

sounds more like attempting parody/humor than being nuts (though that is hard to rule out). And there's also the Uzumaki comic book stuff.

Maybe he's pissed off because he sees his buddy string theorists happily get tenure? Or he's going vigilante on CWRU and wants to make them look like a looney-incubator?

#38

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 3:34 PM

I'd buy the theory of Poe/Sokal...

If there wasn't a lot of evidence to suggest this guy has been slowly "honing" this, uh, "new view" for years now.

seems like way too much effort.

#39

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 3:39 PM

So is the opportunity to refute a two-bit paper that ultimately will have no scientific impact can be so enticing that it is worth the risk of "piling on" a potentially mentally ill person?

You really don't know much about cases like this, do you?

In fact, NOT "piling on", IOW, pointing attention to the behavior, is exactly the reason it likely has gotten this far to begin with.

I can give you dozens of examples where the ONLY reason the person who was ill got treatment is BECAUSE many, MANY, people started directing attention towards their behavior.

again, not only are you clueless about how scientific journals work, the value of peer review, and even how to attack bad science itself, you're also clueless about how best to deal with entrenched mental illness.

seriously, you are the very epitome of a clueless git.

#40

Posted by: doggerel Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 4:59 PM

"'Twas brillig"? Actually, as this joker rambles on about life, I was reminded instead of a rhyme by Dorothy Parker:


Oh, life is a glorious cycle of song,
A medley of extemporanea;
And love is a thing that can never go wrong;
And I am Marie of Romania.

Substitute "faith" for "love" and I think she's got it.

#41

Posted by: doggerel Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 5:01 PM

Oops. That was me at #40. - Steve Bates

#42

Posted by: rivetheretic Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 6:28 PM

Reminds me of this, still one of my favorite bits: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyy-rijXDHw

#43

Posted by: dokerr Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 8:23 PM

I think this guy had a blog too, although now it appears to have no content. Some of the pages can be found on the waybackmachine. Hard to imagine that there are more than one "gyre theorist" out there.

#44

Posted by: natsingleton Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 9:07 PM

Lithium.

#45

Posted by: Ichthyic Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 9:20 PM

Lithium.

cause or cure?

#46

Posted by: Hedy Lamarr Author Profile Page | January 29, 2012 10:11 PM

This paper is so weird and out there that it is either an attempt to Sokal the field of origins of life research, or the man is seriously mentally ill.

Really? I was thinking magic brownies.

#47

Posted by: Amphiox, OM Author Profile Page | January 30, 2012 12:01 AM

Maybe he is angling for an IgNoble, the bullshit is about right

While empirical evidence of some past winners does point to examples to the contrary, IIRC, the criteria of the IgNobel requires that the winner be, at least to some extent, good, valid science, that just happens to be weird.

So is the opportunity to refute a two-bit paper that ultimately will have no scientific impact can be so enticing that it is worth the risk of “piling on” a potentially mentally ill person? What an interesting ethical choice.

What is really an interesting ethical choice is the utterly putrid deliberate misrepresentation of reality for a transparently obvious dishonest ulterior agenda evinced in the first sentence.

As for what PZ is actually doing. No, it is not an interesting ethical choice at all. It is a boringly obvious uninteresting, CORRECT, ethical choice, as the right thing to do typically is.

#48

Posted by: oicur12 Author Profile Page | January 30, 2012 1:03 AM

PZ
Thank you for taking the time to craft this response.

Apparently I was not the only person who read the press release at Science Daily and needed help evaluating it. I appreciate the time you took away from your other educational duties to spend educating me.

#49

Posted by: Dr. Manhattan Author Profile Page | January 31, 2012 1:07 PM

As Mel Brooks observed so long ago...

"I think we're all indebted to Gabby Johnson for clearly stating what needed to be said. I'm particulary glad that these lovely children were here today to hear that speech. Not only was it authentic frontier gibberish, it expressed a courage little seen in this day and age."

#50

Posted by: rafi.najmanovich Author Profile Page | January 31, 2012 7:45 PM

Prof. Myers,
Perhaps it is not wise to post text and figures from the article without the publisher's or author's consent :)
r.

#51

Posted by: Monti0 Author Profile Page | February 2, 2012 8:53 AM

Finally, although a diquantal IEM (X'') undergoes gyrognosis as the gyrobase

of a primary majorgyre, it undergoes gyromnemesis as the gyrapex of an alternagyre. Thus,

gyre learning and memory are relative to the gyradaptive singularity.

Wow... just... wow.

Or shoudl I say Gyrowow?

#52

Posted by: Monti0 Author Profile Page | February 2, 2012 9:09 AM

The comments on his posts at tinfoilpalace is really interesting. It appears that some people think that his research was suppressed because it is too great a truth too handle...

Well... It IS a conspiracy site.

http://tinfoilpalace.eamped.com/2012/01/27/ik-in-science-daily/

http://tinfoilpalace.eamped.com/2011/12/23/theory-of-the-origin-evolution-and-nature-of-life/

#53

Posted by: https://me.yahoo.com/a/ySJ8lS8Zk4eL5zBaKslsAWy_lpIR#b18ed Author Profile Page | February 5, 2012 10:11 AM

Shades of l'affair Brogdanov in particle physics? We can speculate about the author's mental state, but the minimal inference is that he's suffering from Crank Disorder -- a unique condition with some symptoms of schizophrenia and narcissistic personality disorder, but not identical to either condition.

#54

Posted by: colin2 Author Profile Page | February 5, 2012 12:05 PM

In the same issue is a revealing note from the editor, Shu-Kun Lin, with the title "Publication of Controversial Papers in Life"

http://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/2/1/213/

excerpts

"Some papers
recently accepted for publication in Life have attracted significant attention. Moreover, members of the Editorial Board have objected to these papers; some have resigned, and others have questioned the scientific validity of the contributions. In response I want to first state some basic facts regarding all publications in this journal. All papers are peer-reviewed, although it is often difficult to obtain expert reviewers for some of the interdisciplinary topics covered by this journal. I feel obliged to stress that although we will strive to guarantee the scientific standard of the papers published in this journal, all the responsibility for the ideas contained in the published articles rests entirely on their authors."


"In the case of the Dr. Andrulis’s long paper, the two reviewers were both faculty members of reputable universities different than the author’s and both went to considerable trouble presenting lengthy review reports. Dr. Andrulis revised his manuscript as requested, and the paper was subsequently published."


Note the number of reviewers.

#55

Posted by: David Marjanović Author Profile Page | February 5, 2012 1:40 PM

Perhaps it is not wise to post text and figures from the article without the publisher's or author's consent :)

If the publisher wants to bother suing, we're going to find out.

Sadly, the author's consent is completely irrelevant. In most scientific journals, the authors must transfer all copyright to the publisher before publication.

In the same issue is a revealing note from the editor, Shu-Kun Lin, with the title "Publication of Controversial Papers in Life"

PZ has already blogged on this frank admission of complete incompetence.

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