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Old 03-06-2011, 01:52   #1
ES 96
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NASA scientist finds evidence of alien life

actual_bacterium.jpg

March 05, 2011
http://news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrend...nceofalienlife

http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/...ife-meteorite/

I'll wait for his peers to publish their findings before putting much stock in this. I recall finds in meteorites that were found to be false positives (of terrestrial origin) before.

On the other hand, if true, then good on ya Dr. Hoover!
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Old 03-06-2011, 02:21   #2
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Ok, most publications are reviewed BEFORE they are published. It sounds like they just wanted to push this out as soon as possible. I find it odd that they don't show the images of the negative controls ( moon rocks and silicon wafers ). This is sloppy science and even though they show a positive control which is the image of a bacteria found on earth, they need to show what the image of a structure devoid of life looks like to be consistent.

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Old 03-06-2011, 09:54   #3
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Ok, most publications are reviewed BEFORE they are published. It sounds like they just wanted to push this out as soon as possible. I find it odd that they don't show the images of the negative controls ( moon rocks and silicon wafers ). This is sloppy science and even though they show a positive control which is the image of a bacteria found on earth, they need to show what the image of a structure devoid of life looks like to be consistent.
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Hoover’s findings were published late Friday night in the Journal of Cosmology, a peer-reviewed scientific journal.
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In order to satisfy the inevitable hoard of buzz-killing skeptics, Hoover’s study and evidence were made available to his peers in the scientific community in advance of the study’s publications, giving them a chance to thoroughly dissect his findings. Comments from those who decided to sift through the evidence will be published online, alongside the study.

“Given the controversial nature of his discovery, we have invited 100 experts and have issued a general invitation to over 5,000 scientists from the scientific community to review the paper and to offer their critical analysis,” writes Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics scientist Dr. Rudy Schild, who serves as the Journal of Cosmology’s editor-in-chief. “No other paper in the history of science has undergone such a thorough vetting, and never before in the history of science has the scientific community been given the opportunity to critically analyze an important research paper before it is published.”

Looks to me like this has gotten a thorough peer-review already, yes? The comments will be interesting though.
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Old 03-06-2011, 10:03   #4
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Meh...anybody who's ever been to Washington, DC, knows alien life forms exist - however, we normally use the PC acceptable term for them...politicians.

Richard
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Old 03-06-2011, 10:05   #5
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I thought they already found a fossil from Mars in Arizona or somewhere a while back.

Everybody knows there's life from outside this planet because there's no way that guy who plays the main character in "House" is human.
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Old 03-06-2011, 11:18   #6
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Looks to me like this has gotten a thorough peer-review already, yes? The comments will be interesting though.
When you are not showing all of the data, it becomes suspect. They also mentioned that they published it so it would get criticism. The only criticism they are going to get is a big "WTF" from their peers. If they wanted to do this properly, they would not make an announcement on Yahoo news or Fox News and the additional review should have been done in private before the paper is published.

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Old 03-06-2011, 11:48   #7
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When you are not showing all of the data, it becomes suspect. They also mentioned that they published it so it would get criticism. The only criticism they are going to get is a big "WTF" from their peers. If they wanted to do this properly, they would not make an announcement on Yahoo news or Fox News and the additional review should have been done in private before the paper is published.
IMO, your analysis overlooks the political dimensions of the announcement.
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Old 03-06-2011, 11:52   #8
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oops, Bible missed this one by a mile.
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Old 03-06-2011, 12:30   #9
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IMO, your analysis overlooks the political dimensions of the announcement.
Sigaba,

From a scientifical point of view, I do not care about the political announcement. I am looking at this from a technical point of view. When you are making qualitative assertions, you need a qualitative negative control image of the lunar dust samples and silicon wafers that they claimed to have used. I can look at the paper again but I don't see that image in there.

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Old 03-06-2011, 13:15   #10
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Sigaba,

From a scientifical point of view, I do not care about the political announcement. I am looking at this from a technical point of view. When you are making qualitative assertions, you need a qualitative negative control image of the lunar dust samples and silicon wafers that they claimed to have used. I can look at the paper again but I don't see that image in there.
Wiseman--

My statement was not a criticism of your technical analysis.

I was offering the opinion that, for better or for worse, scientific research done by a government agency is going to have a political component. Does separating technical analysis from other factors help or hinder our understanding of how scientists--and professionals in other fields--get things done? (To paraphrase a feminist slogan "the scientific is political.")

This may be a great opportunity for one to think about how he/she would handle the political dimensions of scientific work.
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Old 03-06-2011, 13:38   #11
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This may be a great opportunity for one to think about how he/she would handle the political dimensions of scientific work.
Ah-ha! Politics and science - - I knew you'd find a way to bring this around to global climate change.

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Old 03-06-2011, 13:55   #12
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With an almost infinite number of galaxies (and with those too many planets to count) for anyone to believe we are alone in the universe is just plain stupid.

I also don't care about the "politics" or what the pope thinks of the announcement.
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Old 03-06-2011, 14:14   #13
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We are just an insignificant spec in this universe. Our planet just happened to be the right distance from the Sun. To sustain life.
I think I posted this before. If you broke down the History of the world into a 24 hour day. Every minute is equal to 30,000 years. Recorded history of man only took up the last ten seconds. Dinosaurs ruled for over two hours.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEAYOYJKCgM
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Old 03-06-2011, 15:39   #14
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"oops, Bible missed this one by a mile."

What? How?

"Recorded history of man only took up the last ten seconds."

Wrong. (Maybe at the time of the original report.)
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Old 03-06-2011, 16:14   #15
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I think Cosmos came out in the early eighties. Maybe 30 years ago. So each minute is worth 30,000 years. Thats not even going to add a second to our time here.
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