jwl wrote:Yes that's what I said, they [the results] weren't reproduced in a consistent manner. But some results are better than no results at all. Without these results, you have no reason to think cold fusion could happen at all.
Thing is, in science, "occasional studies that can't be replicated support X"
is not better than "there is no evidence for X."
If you do enough studies with people who have a strong enough confirmation bias,
someone will eventually claim to have found evidence of X.
But if the claim of X cannot be replicated, and there is no theoretical basis explaining why they
should be right, then those people should be dismissed as simply incorrect. Because "this one guy did his experiment wrong or over-interpreted his result or just made shit up after trying and failing over and over for twenty years" is a much more plausible explanation than "totally new phenomenon observed but it mysteriously ceases to exist except when John Q. Hergleheimer does it while holding his thumb on the balance scale!"
Otherwise we are forced to believe in ghosts, flying saucers, ESP, and all sorts of other pseudoscientific nonsense... that someone, somewhere, at some time, claimed to be able to observe.
Well what the cold fusioneers say is that the failed replications are being done by people who are not doing the experiment properly (I think they say that they don't allow enough deuterium to come into the palladium during the electrolysis or something). The more likely explanation, of course, is that it is the cold fusioneers that aren't doing the experiment properly and what they are seeing is artifacts. But weak evidence is better than no evidence.
At some point, weak evidence IS no evidence. You cannot expect people to seriously entertain a scientific claim, when the 'evidence' supporting it is overwhelmingly likely to be nothing but hoaxes and wishful thinking, after decades of experimentation by a large group of committed self-proclaimed 'experts.'
In the sense that without those results being legitimate, there is no reason to think that cold fusion works. You are only going to get the idea that cold fusion works if you presume (some of) the results to be legitimate, therefore presuming cold fusion works necessarily means presuming one of these positive experiments also works.
The flip side of that is that it is grossly unscientific to say "this exists because I think this exists." Or, equivalently, to say "there is only evidence that this works if you already believe that it works."
Evidence is supposed to come in
before scientists change their minds, not afterwards.
Fusion as we know it is not incompatible with QCD, but it also can't be derived from QCD in practice because of the difficulty in computation. Lattice QCD is hard. Fusion is reasonably well-understood, but not from the standard model of particle physics, and instead from things like the semi-empirical mass formula and the woods–saxon potential.
If there is no incompatibility, why should we assume that the interlocking body of theories is anything BUT a complete description of the process?