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by weland
3881 days ago
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> Only a quarter of scientific drug research is successfully reproduced as well.[1] The article you are mentioning in [1] refers to the fact that a quarter of the published drug research is not successfully reproduced. That doesn't mean that people published papers saying "Hey, we did this experiment. Its results cannot be consistently reproduced, so we think it's unconclusive/because our theory is flawed with regards to this or that/because the experiment was flawed with regards to this or that and we think it can be refined by changing this approach or that apparatus". It means that a quarter of the published papers say "Hey, we did this experiment which offers conclusive proof of X", but it turns out that their experiments cannot be consistently reproduced, so they're proof of exactly nothing. That is unscientific. |
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This is patently false. Publication is never a claim of conclusive proof; it's a claim of evidence.
I'm sorry, but you are wrong about this. False-positives don't suddenly make the experiment un-scientific. You're very misinformed about how science works:
- False positives are part of the landscape
- Contradictory evidence is part of the landscape
- The above issues are resolved by tracking reproducibility of results
You can come to a wrong conclusion using valid scientific means. The scientific method hinges on the assumption that research will eventually converge on a correct result.