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by Jack_Hacker
1261 days ago
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>The story is a long one, but for now let’s skip to the end: future-proof, established scientific facts can be identified via a solid (>95%) international scientific consensus, born of scientific labour, in a community that is large and diverse. In the entire history of science, no claim meeting these criteria has ever been overturned, despite enormous opportunity for that to happen (if it were ever going to happen). Newtonian physics stood for hundreds of years, and we now understand it to be an approximation of quantum mechanics. It's still useful, but merely useful. Do not mistake "useful" for "true." |
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Yeah, that's just not true. It's an absurd claim. Medical science is loaded with examples of things that had wide consensus (but...95%? Probably? Feels like this is a loophole in the argument...) which were subsequently found to be false. Consider just a few examples:
* hormone replacement therapy
* aspirin for heart attacks
* mammograms for younger women (< 50)
Just this year, a huge RCT called into doubt the usefulness of mass colonoscopy [1], which was absolutely "scientific consensus" until now (you can see this, because the study was met with rather vicious backlash).
For a more basic science example, consider "The Central Dogma of Molecular Biology" [2] which, of course, was so "consensus" that they named it "The Central Dogma": genetic information goes from DNA to RNA to proteins.
This was fact...until they discovered retroviruses. Then prions. Oops.
This stuff happens all the time. The authors are either not scientists, or they're so blinkered by ideology that they're unreliable.
[1] https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa2208375
[2] https://www.genome.gov/genetics-glossary/Central-Dogma