dscott8 wrote:This is what I love about science. It never stops looking for evidence, never assumes it knows everything, never clings to an outmoded theory when new facts contradict it. There's always something more out there. For a scientists, every day is Christmas morning.
Thinking of science as being a process of better approximations of theory to reality, facts
should change the theories. However, historically, this does not happen instantly. Most scientists try to find ways of making small modifications to accepted theories. Think of the epicycles which were put into planetary orbits before Kepler's work was accepted.
BTW, some scientists are concerned about the quality of modern published papers, and are testing this. One sent out a paper for peer review with ten deliberate errors in it: the most that any reviewer detected was TWO. Others are testing to see whether published experiments and/or observations can be replicated, and are finding that about half of those which should be repeatable aren't. Their conclusion is that the push to publish is causing many to settle for mediocre results, and that journals tend to prefer new things over checking the accuracy of older ones.
Just as with short sellers in investments, people whose worldviews are not commonly accepted are valuable because they are more likely to turn up problems between theory and fact. This is with the proviso that they stick to facts, and not just contrary theories. Short sellers, and these, are often disliked and disparaged by non-evidential methods
PS. It has been pointed out that while earlier methods of measuring light speed do not have as high a resolution as modern ones, if you graph them with appropriate probable accuracy bands and find the center, they show a disturbing and consistent tendency for earlier ones to report a higher speed. This continued while time was measured by astronomical observations, but stopped when the atomic clock became the reference. Can anyone suggest why this change
Another, with much higher accuracy, is measurements of planetary magnetic fields. Russell Humphrey's theory predicted correctly the fields of Uranus and Neptune, before the spacecraft measured them, and predicts decreasing magnetic fields for all of them. The earth's has decreased by about 10% in the century and a half it has been measured, the two Mercury flybys found the predicted 4% in 30 years. Both fit the Humphrey predictions.