The Koolade over at ARN is particularly strong today. Robert Deyes speaks of "biologist Casey Luskin". Seriously. At best, Luskin was a geologist MS in earth sciences before becoming a lawyer. He has one (second-author) paper:
Lisa Tauxe, Casey Luskin, Peter Selkin, Phillip Gans, and Andy Calvert, “Paleomagnetic results from the Snake River Plain: Contribution to the time-averaged field global database,” Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems (G3), 5(8) (August, 2004).
Creationist credentialing once again, I fear.
Equally as problematic is Deyes' claim:
We learn many a lesson from Conan Doyle's thriller perhaps the most important being the absolute need for strong evidence and empirical rigor in science.
Indeed. Pity Conan Doyle descended into spiritualism and a naive belief in fairies. What we can learn from his literary productions isn't as much as Deyes wants.
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Gaaaakkkkkkkk!
Luskin is most certainly NOT a geologist!
Luskin studied "earth science" which is like 8th grade science for college students.
I know geologists. Geologists are friends of mine. And Casey Luskin is no geologist. Rocks in one's head does not count.
Looks like he's already changed it...
@ Bill
Fixed it for you :)
@ Wes
No doubt he acknowledged me for pointing out his little error :)
God, I just went through and read some of Luskin's quotes in that ARN article. There's some thick, steaming bullshit in there:
Oh my God! Gene trees don't always match! Well, that means we'll just have to throw out this whole evolution thing and say that Jesus made animals so that Texans could have something to shoot at.
Luskin will never read it (well, at least if he does he won't understand it), but Thomas Mailund has a well-illustrated explanation of gene trees and species trees.
Hum, I have to disagree here with the point about being 'second' author on a paper meaning anything. Having only one may be the actual point, but being second cannot be used to imply anything. I have found myself between first and last author rank several times in my carrier and it doesn't mean I hadn't a real if not significant contribution to the studies nor that I can't defend what these studies contributed to the corpus of science.
To my prejudice, it happened that I did let authors take priority over myself to help boosting their carrier profile. I find deeply unfortunate that people would judge my contribution as detrimental to the published work when it's not. I would really like other scientists to stop thinking too much about ranks in authorship...
@ Laurent
I wasn't making any commentary about the status of second authors in general. My point was simply about Deyes' credentialling of Luskin as a scientist when he clearly has done more as a lawyer than he even achieved as a scientist. Having one's name of a single paper does not make one a "scientist" in any meaningful sense of the word.
Having one's name of a single paper does not make one a "scientist" in any meaningful sense of the word.
Hum... Makes me think a lot. If you need a subject for a future blog post, I would certainly enjoy reading your take on such a complex issue... :-) Not that I would disagree, quite the contrary, but I don't seem to get a simple answer about how to delineate a scientist from a non-scientist...
(Of course Luskin isn't, we are simply drifting away from the post's subject here)
I wonder if ANY of you heard what a generic fallacy is.
If you would, you would not make such fools of yourself.
thanks
@ Konstantin
do you mean "genetic" fallacy? i'm betting you did. either way, you clearly don't understand how the fallacy works. the issue here isn't that luskin is wrong because he isn't a biologist. the issue is that he was given false credentials as a way of suggesting that he is an expert and, therefore, has an opinion that should be heeded on the subject.
please understand the issue at hand before commenting.
thanks.