At 06:52 PM 9/9/2012, Jed Rothwell wrote:
Jouni Valkonen <<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected]> wrote:

What comes to cold fusion, there are no established scientific point of view . . .


Yes, there is. It is the set of facts in the peer-reviewed literature published in mainstream journals. This is the definition of an "established scientific point of view." There is no other definition.

These facts constitute overwhelming evidence that the effect is real. The people at Wikipedia, at Sci. Am. and elsewhere have replaced this standard with a set of rumors or nonsensical assertions made by people who know nothing about the research.

Rothwell is right. When he pointed this out on Wikipedia, even though it was only in suggestions on the cold fusion article talk page, he was banned, with ridiculous and clearly false charges heaped on top of the only real thing that could be said about his writing. He was blunt, and thus possibly uncivil.

In fact, I learned about cold fusion because, as a Wikipedia editor, interested in community process and neutrality policy, I noticed that lenr-canr.org was blacklisted. I intervened, and eventually this went to the Arbitration Committee. The Committee found that administrator JzG had, being involved in the topic (as a skeptic, based on what a friend, an elecrochemist, had told him years before, and which he very likely did not understand), used his tools in violation of recusal policy. JzG was actually an egregious violator, but he'd also been a very helpful volunteer in certain areas. I was told, before the case concluded, that he'd be gently reprimanded. That was correct. However, I was also told that he would then be on a short leash. That was not correct. He was careful not to use his adminstrative tools, *usually*, but he used his reputation as an administrator to get away with lying about evidence.

I'd successfully gotten cold fusion removed from the spam blacklist on Wikipedia, but as soon as that possibility appeared, he went to the meta coordinating wiki and requested a *global* blacklisting. It was immediately granted, this was their old friend, JzG. Contrary arguments there were ignored. So while the Arbitration Committee was reprimanding JzG for what he'd personally done on Wikipedia, the same thing, with broader consequences, was done on meta. And meta was "outide the remit" of the Arbitration Committee.

The meta decision had been closed by a steward who, I later found, was abusive in a lot of ways. He eventually resigned, when he started losing debates. I then requested a reconsideration of the blacklisting decision. It was simple, but JzG appeared and presented the same lies. You can present a series of lies in a few words. Demonstrating that they are false can take a lot of words, and calling them "lies" can get you banned. (Technically, it could be said that these were merely errors, not lies, except that the same issues had been considered many times by the community, JzG's claims had been roundly rejected, so *he knew* that there was a problem with what he was saying. But he said it anyway, which is why I call it "lies.")

So, to respond, I needed to cover the evidence on each claim. I did so, keeping it as concise as I could reasonably manage with the time I had. (It takes longer to write less, if one needs to be complete.) Meanwhile, JzG requested, on Wikipedia, that I be banned. There was a discussion and the usual suspects collected and voted for a ban. A few people pointed out the lack of evidence, etc. An administrator looked at the discussion and looked at the discussion on meta, saw the "wall of text," and decided to ban me for writing walls of text. Wikipedians, typically, dislike "walls of text," which really means anything longer than their attention span for the topic. It doesn't matter how well the material is organized.

And then the request for delisting was granted by an independent administrator. And that is why it is now possible to link to lenr-canr.org. The links are often removed, using the very same discredited arguments that were considered *in detail* in many places.

Wikipedia does not build knowledge in the community. The same issues get considered over and over and over.



. . . therefore it is impossible to write a good Wikipedia article on cold fusion that would satisfy everyone.


You do not need to satisfy people. You need to report the replicated, peer-reviewed facts of the matter. Science is not a popularity contest.

For Wikipedia, editors need to insert neutrally worded text that is referenced by the best possible sources. The gold standard is a peer-reviewed review of the field, published in a mainstream journal (i.e., not a specialist journal that might be leniently reviewed, the CMNS Journal would probably not be accepted, but Naturwissenschaften should be golden.)

Editors should remove unsourced or weakly sourced material. The article is a farrago of material from sources of many different levels of quality, and much is quoted from very old sources as if this was fresh. For example, it is claimed that cold fusion theories are "ad hoc." I'm not quite sure what that means, but conveys an impression of something not deep, not thoroughly considered.

Takahashi's TSC theory is incomplete, for sure. It assumes a starting position for deuterium molecules that could be difficult to reach, but the point is that it's not deeply difficult. It might happen in PdD, or especially at the surface (which is what Takahashi has most recently proposed), and that's enough to start. He also has not rigorously worked out how the energy of fusion is dissipated, though, again, he presents some ideas. But as to the fusion itself, he *predicts* it from quantum field theory, given his starting configuration. This is very much not ad hoc. But "ad hoc" might have been true for many early theories.

Cold fusion advocates have failed to market their ideas. Instead many cold fusion advocates (such as Krivit) took seriously that there would be evidence for Ni–>Cu transmutations, although scientific evidence was mostly zero. If Krivit-level experts are doing such mistakes in basic science, how it is possible that this field could be taken seriously by Wikipedia?


Krivit is mistaken. He is not an expert at any level. What he takes seriously has no bearing on what is true. You need to look at journals and professional scientists to judge what should go into an encyclopedia.

That's an idea, but is actually mistaken about what "should go into an encylopedia," and specifically into Wikipedia. Material in the highest quality sources (like those Jed is mentioning), particularly secondary sources (i.e., reviews, as an example), can be stated as fact. Other material can be used, sometimes, with attribution.

One of the problems with Wikipedia is that much of the project is sourced from news media. The Arbitration Committee has ruled that science articles should preferably be sourced from peer-reviewed journals and academic publications, but that often doesn't get out to the masses, and the pseudoskeptics will use whatever they can find.

On RationalWiki, the cold fusion article states that the findings of Pons and Fleischmann were "never reproduced." That's a very common claim, you can find it in many media sources. And it's preposterous. My point is that you can find all kinds of non-authoritative crap in media sources. Someone wrote, in 1989, when it might still have been true, that nobody could replicate it. And then a whole generation of reporters repeated this "fact."

(And then pseudoskeptics, when you point out the 153 peer-reviewed reports of the Fleischmann-Pons Heat Effect, will point out that those weren't "exact replications." Of course not! SRI, for example, wanted to use a different calorimetric method, to answer objections raised about the FP methods (which were sound, as later found, but controversial). So they did it differently! But they found the same Effect. Anomalous heat from highly loaded palladium deuteride. They confirmed that the heat was erratic, i.e., with P13/P14, with P13 being a light water control, and P14 using heavy water, they found that the first two times they ran a high-current excursion through the cathodes, nothing unusual happened. The third time, the heavy water cell showed very clear excess heat, the hydrogen control nothing.)

(Many skeptics, hearing that cold fusion experiments produced variable results, assumed that the results must be close to the noise. No. P14 was not close to noise. Rather, excess heat either did not appear, or it appeared, often quite strongly, far above noise. And then the experimenter would try again and find nothing. Cold fusion was famous for frustration. *It is a verified characteristic of the effect,* which may last until it is understood and experiments can be better designed.)



Although Abd is saying that there is good correlation with helium and excess heat, somehow I find it very odd, that if correlation is good, why it is so darn difficult to replicate?


You are confused.

The quality of the correlation and the ease of the experiment are completely separate qualities. They have absolutely nothing to do with one another. The correlation might be very low with an experiment that is dead simple to do; or the correlation might be high with an easy experiment; or the experiment might be difficult and the correlation nonexistent -- which the case with tritium.

Yes, I'd say he was confused. I hope he gets it now.

By the way, we don't know if tritium is correlated with excess heat. I've looked into this a bit. What happened was that Bockris, for example, ran experiments looking for tritium, and found some. But the levels of tritium were way too low to explain the excess heat observed in *other* experiments. If they measured heat at all, in the tritium experiments, it's unclear. They did not report any data on heat/tritium correlation.

So one of the fairly easy experiments to do is to set up the FPHE, and measure heat, helium *and* tritium. Also, the H/D ratio should be varied, to determine the effect, particularly at low levels.

Essentially, I expect that tritium *is* correlated with excess heat, under constant conditions, and maybe with the H/D ratio. No heat, no tritium (or very low tritium).

But we don't know.



The correlation is so difficult to understand that even Krivit cannot understand it.


Understanding the correlation is quite easy. Anyone can see it in the graphs. Krivit cannot understand it because he often fails to understand simple concepts such as scientific notation. In any case, you should not gauge the validity of the arguments by looking at Krivit's understanding of them. This is a nutty metric.


Therefore I would say that Abd is exaggerating the quality of evidence.


You say this based on Krivit's (mis)-understanding? I suggest you look at the data yourself!

Jouni could tell us what he finds difficult to understand. A correlation between two variables is fairly easy to understand. What may be difficult is to determine the cause. Krivit sometimes challenges results in this area, finding this or that error or alleged error. But he doesn't really challenge the fact of the correlation, on the the specific values found.

The correlation establishes, with a strong inference, that helium is a product of whatever causes the heat. Krivit may not like the SRI work, which is the most accurate to date, because it implies close agreement with 23.8 MeV. However, Widom and Larsen have supported a higher value, over 30 MeV/He-4. The problem is that if this is real, not merely the result of a little lost or unmeasured helium, it would mean that some other reaction is contributing *more* heat per helium. Deuterium fusion has a very high yield per He-4. Widom and Larson hypothesize a farrago of reactions, but the problem is that these reactions, in terms of measured products, don't amount to much of anything. It's possible to put together a theoretical series of reactions that could produce some high level of heat, but this, then, requires that reactions proceed multiply, in sequence, and cold fusion is clearly a rare process, so repeated reactions *on the same target* would be rare upon rare. It doesn't work. We would, then, expect the intermediate products to be left. We'd expect their quantities to be *greater* than helium. Nothing remotely qualifies as that.

Krivit has never presented a clear examination of the issues. I hope that he will.

Jouni, the authoritative source at this point, besides Dr. Storms' book, is his review in Naturwissenschaften. You can read it on lenr-canr.org. "Status of cold fusion (2010)." If you don't understand anything, ask.

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