|
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
I read this thread and it has some good information but it doesn't quite answer the question I had before reading this. I did some research on how the solar system formed itself and came up with an unconventional explanation. I wrote a brief paper complete with bibliography but what do I do with it, where specifically can I send it for peer review?
|
|
|
| joetommasi |
|
This message has been deleted by ToSeek.
Reason: Duplicate post
|
|
||||
|
Quote:
|
|
||||
|
Well, $30 is better than $5,000 for a patent!
Would a copyright cover the details of a process?
__________________
I am Mugs, of the Alien clan of Usa, Nordamerica, a Terran, of Sol. Perception isn't reality. It's merely an abstraction thereof, and quite often not a very good one at that. "Staying young requires the unceasing cultivation of the ability to unlearn old falsehoods." - Heinlein "Freedom begins when you tell Ms. Grundy to go fly a kite." - Heinlein |
|
|||
|
I'm something of a writer but one point which hasn't been made here is that, of course, we are all readers too. And we each of us know what we like to read about. my writings are a bit slow at the moment but I would like to insert a pleas for more writings along a certain topic line. I'd like to read some up to date literature.
What I'd like to read about is the hardware plans for shoertly up and coming space adventures. For example, how is NASA getting on with the design for another lunar lander? I've just seen a drawing in the newspaper of something that looked as if it was out of '50s science fiction. There weren't many details attached to it which seemed a shame to me, but clearly there is nothing much available at grass roots. What about the hardware to get us to Mars? We 've talked about it long enough. Ever since the eighties I seem to rember ideas about twin spacecraft on a double mission to the red planet, plus landers which looked like big versions of the existing luner landers. A bit like Capricorn One writ large. I must say I'm baffled and bemused at the thought of a manned landing which incorporated the necessity to make a return trip. Are we all just singing into the wind, chaps, or can we really give it out best shot. Whatever, lets not let it end up like the fiasco the lunar landings have turned out at length to be and will continue to be till we establish some permenant lunar bases.
__________________
You cannot create a truth by believing in a falsehood. |
|
||||
|
Quote:
A real moment to me.
__________________
I'm not completely heartless, the doctor who removed it told me he'd never be able to get it all. |
|
|||
|
What is being missed here, IMHO, is that there are really 3 parts to saying something is real.
1. Does it exist? 2. Can we actually define what it is doing? 3. Do we know what the mechanism is that makes it? So, for the earth sciences we are pretty close to knowing all three, BUT until GR and QFT are Unified, for cosmology, # 2 is many times iffy, and #3 won't be known until it is. I think it takes #3 to really make it 'real'. |
|
||||
|
Quote:
4. Are you in the right universe? |
|
|||
|
Quote:
) |
|
|||
|
|
|
|||
|
Hopefully this doesn't come off as too 'elitist' sounding............
There is a reason that people go to universities, get phD's, and learn all the tools essential to doing proper scientific research. If the average person does "independent research" then science as a whole will not benefit, but instead be inundated with bad ideas, bad assumptions, and bad research. Getting your ideas out to the science community is a good idea, but is detrimental if it is masquerading as expert opinion. If it is published in a journal, then its going to be accepted as expert opinion regardless of who wrote it. My advice is to become properly trained in your chosen field, and then work on your research in conjunction with a university, museum, or research institute. Any "journal" that is lax on the peer review process (online or not) is not doing science a service in any way. Science must retain its integrity. Presenting non-peer reviewed work on a website for example could lead to some poor high school student interpreting that work as legitimate.
__________________
Those who cannot attack the thought, instead attack the thinker. Great spirits have always faced violent protest from mediocre minds |
|
|||
|
It did. What you missed is that to make a discovery one has to think hard about it and he/she must be right. Intelligent amateurs have an avantage over professionals since they think harder and since they don't know how things work they imagine how they work and sometimes they really work this way. Professional on the other hand usually believe in a theory that they learned but it ain't so. But of course for one inelligent amateur there are many ignorant fools which makes an impression that you are 100% right.
|
|
|||
|
So you're saying that an amateur scientist "thinks harder" and therefore is more qualified than a professional? I'm afraid that doesn't really make any sense.
__________________
Those who cannot attack the thought, instead attack the thinker. Great spirits have always faced violent protest from mediocre minds |
|
|||
|
One example means nothing. In todays world of technology, an amateur 99% of the times not only does not have access to the proper tools, but lacks the guidance of an expert in using those tools. If you want to do "meaningful" research, my advice is to go get some degrees. Otherwise you're shooting in the dark............
__________________
Those who cannot attack the thought, instead attack the thinker. Great spirits have always faced violent protest from mediocre minds |
|
||||
|
Bad example, at least for the point you're trying to make. This "patent office clerk" already had a degree (or its equivalent) from a university. In today's employment climate he probably would not have been hired on grounds of "overqualification".
__________________
Microsoft is over if you want it. The bar has been lowered for the promotion of ATM ideas; the bar for the acceptance of ATM ideas must remain high. |
|
||||
|
Has there ever been a case where someone presented an original idea on bautforum.com that later made its way to a peer reviewed journal, or at least to a poster presentation at some conference somewhere?
__________________
Fitting a three-parameter curve of uncertain form to ten points with three exceptions certainly brings one to the far edge of the known world. -- Bradley Ephron |