mmcirvin: (Default)
mmcirvin ([personal profile] mmcirvin) wrote2003-08-12 05:40 pm

McIrvin's addenda to Clarke's Laws

Arthur C. Clarke wrote down some laws. Here are some more:

4. When a distinguished expert in one field states that all the leading scientists in a different field are lying or making an elementary mistake, he or she is almost certainly wrong.

5. This goes double if the story breaks in New Scientist.

6. Triple, if it breaks in a popular book by the dissenting expert. (Matthew Nisbet stated this law as "Beware of Books". While I haven't read the specific book he was critiquing, the rule is a good one.)

7. Quadruple, if the question at hand impinges on partisan politics.

[identity profile] mmcirvin.livejournal.com 2003-08-13 01:13 pm (UTC)(link)
And while there's always that off chance that the pre-paradigm thought is on to something, the reader really has no way of gauging that, especially if chapters 2 through 25 are bitter meditations on why the entrenched establishment is suppressing the theory.