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lol, I wrote a very similar comment here a few days ago:

https://www.hackerneue.com/item?id=43964524

It's true, that paper is nonsense. There's not really much else to say. Preprint servers sometimes publish the sort of stuff that wouldn't pass peer review. (Remember that S.Korean "superconductor" from about two years ago!?) The press should be cautious when writing about it.


Although that paper even made it to PRL. I guess I should have written up some similar nonsense and sent it to PRL, might have improved my career chances.
Whether it’s nonsense or not, this quote in the critical assessment is concerning:

> If I were a science journalist writing an article about a supposedly shocking development like this, I would email some experts and check to see if it’s for real.

An attitude like that would have us all believing the earth is flat or that the sun revolves around the earth. After all, experts of the time believed both wrongly.

I'd like to revise that comment to, "email the experts to better understand how this finding fits into the current scientific worldview."

We shouldn't take the experts on blind faith, but we definitely shouldn't take the challenges on blind faith either.

It is true that revolutionary theories may be both true and controversial but they are rarely friendless or obviously wrong to nearly all practitioners of the relevant fields and those theories are legion and without merit.

Without being up to date in the minutia of every field one will be ill disposed to judge which of 100 piles of nonsense extant at any given time are real discoveries and which bunkum and ones work as a journalist would be so compromised by the 1000 lies one spread that none should believe the one truth they uncovered.

I wouldn't credit anyone so stupid as not to consult ones peers.

I agree with that comment. Experts can be wrong, of course, but the null hypothesis is that their opinion is 'more correct' than that of a science journalist.

As an aside, nobody really believed the earth was flat: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myth_of_the_flat_Earth.

> nobody really believed the earth was flat

Your link only debates that during the Middle Ages people thought the earth was flat.

Those living in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt believed we all lived on a flat disc or plane floating in the ocean.

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