file-drawer Type post Author David Coppedge Date May 29, 2025 CategoriesEthicsMetascienceScience Reporting Tagged , accuracy, Alexander Goldberg, artificial intelligence, Blind Man’s Bluff, Christine Coughlin, Dalmeet Singh Chawla, data, data science, evidence, Evolution News, fakery, fallibility, file drawer problem, fraud, generative ai, Gollum Effect, integrity, knowledge, Leipzig, Nancy M. P. King, Nature (journal), objectivity, peer review, PLOS ONE, PNAS, politicization, post-trust, predatory journals, pseudoscience, public trust, Ralf Mrowka, replicability, scientific publishing, scientific reliability, scientists, suppressed evidence, The Conversation, transparency, Wittenberg How the “Scientific Community” Undermines Its Own Trustworthiness David Coppedge May 29, 2025 Ethics, Metascience, Science Reporting 10 The “file drawer problem” leads invariably to biased reporting. It refers to scientists deciding not to report negative results. Read More ›
ping pong ball Type post Author William A. Dembski Date February 9, 2024 CategoriesComputational SciencesScience Reporting Tagged , algorithms, artificial general intelligence, artificial intelligence, deception, deep fakes, deep learning, democracy, historical figures, hype, images, Neural Networks, post-trust, public opinion, robot, robotics, security, skepticism, trade-offs, trust, video Deep Fakes and Propaganda for Artificial General Intelligence William A. Dembski February 9, 2024 Computational Sciences, Science Reporting 6 The video shows a supposed table tennis match between a robot and a top human player. Yet the video is not of an actual match. Read More ›
students-and-teacher-in-a-computer-classroom-stockpack-unspl-lkxsexsrklm-stockpack-unsplash Type post Author Sarah Chaffee Date December 2, 2019 CategoriesMetascienceScience EducationScientific Freedom Tagged , __edited, academic freedom, accuracy, Discovery Institute, diversity, doubt, education, evolutionary theory, Nature (journal), openness, post-trust, post-truth, science denial, science education, Science Education Policy, scientific inquiry, scientific reliability, scientists, strengths and weaknesses, Thomas Kuhn, United Kingdom Breakthrough? Nature Calls for Openness in Science Education Sarah Chaffee December 2, 2019 Metascience, Science Education, Scientific Freedom 3 “Diversity and doubt produce creativity; we must make room for them,” according to Jerry Ravetz. Read More ›
image Type post Author David Klinghoffer Date February 25, 2017 CategoriesApplied SciencesEngineeringEvolution Tagged , __nedited, Doug Axe, engineering, evolutionary informatics, film review, historical sciences, medicine, NASA, post-trust, post-truth, Undeniable (book) Doug Axe: Hidden Figures and the Engineering Challenge to Darwinism David Klinghoffer February 25, 2017 Applied Sciences, Engineering, Evolution 5 Ahead of tomorrow night's Academy Awards ceremonies, Dr. Axe offers some steely and merciless observations. Read More ›