Personal theories are not welcome?

  • Thread starter scavokrj
  • Start date
In summary, the conversation is about the strict guidelines and rules in place on the forum to prevent the spread of crackpot theories. The moderators and administrators are not interested in allowing such theories on the site and have even removed a sub-forum for them. The purpose of the forum is to provide a space for discussing legitimate scientific ideas and theories. The guidelines and rules help to maintain a high level of academic integrity and attract professionals who are willing to help struggling students. The conversation also touches on the importance of learning from this process for those interested in pursuing a scientific career.
  • #1
scavokrj
4
0
Yes I'm a newb to this forum but already I'm a little lost on the ideas here. In a thread I was subscribed to the last note was from an admin...
I'd like to remind all of you that speculation and personal theories are not welcome here.

Thread closed.

- Warren

Thats a bit of a shocker considering everything we know was a personal theory at one point. Especially considering that the question the thread was concerning was a 'personal theory' of someone elses. Is there a rule here I'm missing?

again, newbe here. If this needs moved somewhere that's fine
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
This place is run like the medieval catholic church in certain respects. They do have a special forum for presenting your personal theories, but there are a lot of rules. Maybe they should have another forum considered less serious where anyone can post their crackpot theories as they say.
 
  • #3
You were shown our guidelines during the registration process, and you clicked a checkbox agreeing to those guidelines before you were permitted to post.

Since you obviously did not actually read the guidelines, I will quote the relevant passage here:

Overly Speculative Posts:
Physicsforums.com strives to maintain high standards of academic integrity. There are many open questions in physics, and we welcome discussion on those subjects provided the discussion remains intellectually sound. Posts or threads of a speculative nature that lack substantial support or well-considered argumentation will be deleted. Posts deleted under this rule will be accompanied by a private message from a Staff member, with an invitation to resubmit the post in accordance with our Independent Research Guidelines. Poorly formulated personal theories and unfounded challenges of mainstream science will not be tolerated anywhere on the site.

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=5374

- Warren
 
  • #4
PhilosophyofPhysics said:
This place is run like the medieval catholic church in certain respects. They do have a special forum for presenting your personal theories, but there are a lot of rules. Maybe they should have another forum considered less serious where anyone can post their crackpot theories as they say.

For most of the life of this forum, we had such a forum -- it was called "Theory Development." This sub-forum was removed from the site about two years ago after a vote by the staff.

It was a dumping ground for looneys, conspiracy theorists, and other dregs of society. It required inordinate amounts of moderator attention, added little value to the site, and actually served only to deter educated people from posting here. Most of the people who participated in discussions there never posted anywhere else on the site. TD posters were, effectively, a sub-culture within PF, and contributed nothing to the more reputable parts of the site.

The site has grown tremendously in both activity and quality since we made the decision to remove the Theory Development forum and eliminate crackpot science completely from the site.

If you want to talk about crackpot theories, there are hundreds of other places on the web. Consider sciforums.com or the sci.physics Usenet newsgroup.

There's no reason for us to provide yet another haven for crackpots -- our goals are at odds with the very idea.

- Warren
 
  • #5
chroot said:
There's no reason for us to provide yet another haven for crackpots -- our goals are at odds with the very idea.
- Warren

This is really a 'with all due respect' kind of reply but jeez what's the point of a forum, if this is the case why not an open-source textbook (wikipedia-ish)? Thats all that will come of it.

I totally agree with the
no unfounded challenges of mainstream science
but closing a thread because someone offered a reply to a question that asked "what do you all think about such n such theory..".



I'm sure I'll get a like it or leave it type of reply but don't worry, I won't be here long (or very often) if this is how the admins really are running the forum.

No hard feelings, to each his own. :rolleyes:
 
  • #6
This post has been warned by Tom Mattson. If you level accusations of dishonesty against other members, there will be consequences.

Chroot is not being totally honest, there is no site that has the quality of the now extinct Theory Developement forum, its PF replacement presentation rules are to strict (not its quality rules) and the others lack quality.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #7
scavokrj said:
I totally agree with the but closing a thread because someone offered a reply to a question that asked "what do you all think about such n such theory..".

If the reply is based on speculation and unfounded guess work, what has that accomplished? I might as well make something up and the result would still be the same.

Without knowing PF's history, and that it had tried being "open", I don't think you have enough data points to make any kind of meaningful conclusion. Sure, we all have opinions, but some opinions are back by more facts than others. There's nothing that you are asking here that hasn't been addressed repeatedly already. Just look at the old threads in this Feedback forum.

Zz.
 
  • #8
Lots of professionals have a personal interest in helping out struggling students, but their own career choices may limit the time and opportunities for such "coaching"/teaching sessions.

Those professionals will, however, have no interest in being a lone swallow in a flock of crackpots, and thus, will not bother to spend time at a non-moderated forum.

PF, however, can hope to attract such resourceful individuals as long as it upholds the present day policy.
 
  • #9
PhilosophyofPhysics said:
This place is run like the medieval catholic church in certain respects. They do have a special forum for presenting your personal theories, but there are a lot of rules.

These "rules" for posting a personal theory are very necessary to weed out any crackpot theories. With the independent research forum, PF tries to simulate (to some extent) the publication process in real scientific journals. In stead of whining about this you could also learn from this. If you plan a scientific career, this will allow you to have a clearer image of how "real science" is done. Nobody prevents you from posting your own personal theories as long as they meet certain requirements.

Now, if someone is really convinced about the validity and usefullness of ones research or new theory, it should not be too difficult to meet these requirements without changing the actual content of your theory.I mean, if you really "want" something, you will to anything to get it, right ? That's what's life is all about, no ? If this is not possible, well, than i can assure you that you will not get far with your new ideas and you should NOT be posting them to the general public. You don't want to make yourself look stupid right ?


Maybe they should have another forum considered less serious where anyone can post their crackpot theories as they say.
What possible good can come from that ?

ps : note that the above question is a RAETHORICAL question, so there is no point in starting a discussion out of it.

regards
marlon
 
Last edited:
  • #10
Rhetorical, I think..
 
  • #11
ok, i stand corrected :)

marlon
 
  • #12
If the reply is based on speculation and unfounded guess work,
This is the key point. It is rather annoying and often infuriating for someone to speculate or make dubious claims which contradict established principles, hypotheses, theories, etc . . . and then also claim that established experts and professionals simply do not get it or understand the physics.

Personal theories, and even disagreements/contradictions are fine, IF they are supported by evidence and well-thought out reasoning or sound logic.

One simply needs to start on a firm basis, state the conjectures of one's theory or idea, and accept it when an expert indicates an inconsistency or incorrect assumption or understanding.

That is not an unreasonable expectation!
 
  • #13
I agree. There was another forum I concurently belonged to and I had over 1000 posts before I finally gave up with it and decided to stick with PF.
Why did I give up? Though a science forum, it evolved into a "pseudo-science" forum that attracted some of the most bizarre crackpots I have experienced. Even worse, it became a feeding ground for cult, conspiracy theorists and other people actively recruiting innocents through mind-numbing, twisted scientific "logic"

With PF I do not have to suffer through incessent ramblings.

Granted, I enjoy responsible, creative, "out-of-the-box" speculation as well as the next person, but to go on-and-on about a speculative subject without the establishment and continuance of substantive foundation is like obsessively dwelling in a fantasy world and forcing it on others.

Currently, PF does not allow that type of discourse, and if it ever does I will leave PF as well as I left the former. To be perfectly clear, PF does not exclude speculation, rather demands that the thread maintains scientific credibilty instead of turning into a free-for-all circus of clowns.
 
  • #14
Besides, why does anyone think that the back of anyone's old envelope (except your own, of course) is rivetting reading?

It takes a mere ~1-10 hours of OOMing (doing order of magnitude calculations) or reality checking to reveal to obvious flaws in speculative thinking (in at least 99.9% of cases); if your speculation emerges unblemished from this, elementary step, then it's time to start devoting serious time to it (and that will lead, after a month or ten, to a draft, ready for the IR forum).

To repeat the advice of others in this thread, go read some threads in the Theory Development archive - now consider whether your speculative ideas would come across as any more worth anyone's while to read than what's in TD. If you're still not convinced, then imagine that you have one shot every 2,000 threads to catch the eye of any interested PF reader ... if you believe in the value of this idea, can you honestly say you'd assiduously read every post in all 1,999 other threads?
 
  • #15
Lots of professionals have a personal interest in helping out struggling students, but their own career choices may limit the time and opportunities for such "coaching"/teaching sessions.

Those professionals will, however, have no interest in being a lone swallow in a flock of crackpots, and thus, will not bother to spend time at a non-moderated forum.


This has not been my experience. Replies to my submissions included two from active physics professors, one from a leading award winning physics student, and three or four from physics teachers. Added to these must be several who did not identify themselves but clearly new their subject (these of course, were amongst scores of negative comments). This quality of reply has not been found on any other forum .
Yet without exception PF admininstrators included me amongst the crackpots. The reason seems to be that while some experts see a grain of hope in an idea and are prepared to offer encouragement; PF administrators are 'book experts' who lack any ability to acknowledge the limitations of current theory, or support any idea that might reduce those limitations.
Theory developement should be about ideas that can be developed not just variations on current theorems. I am still making some progress with the aid of a local retired physicist, an expert on light; who worked for Kodak , but sadly not so up to date on particles in general. But how I miss the cut and thrust of the old PF theory developement.
 
  • #16
jhmar said:
PF administrators are 'book experts' who lack any ability to acknowledge the limitations of current theory, or support any idea that might reduce those limitations.

Wrong. Most of the PF staff either has already earned, or is in the process of earning, a doctoral degree. That means that most of the PF staff is part of the effort to expand the frontiers of physics/astronomy/mathematics/engineering/(insert technical discipline here).
 
  • #17
Let me remind everyone that doubts the "theory-submit-guidelines that you can send in your theories to excellent and proffesional papers called "Nature" or "Science". They will make sure that your theories are treated as they deserves. Insert evil laughter here
 
  • #18
What I never understand about this topic is why people presume to have an opinion on what should and should not be supported.

The forum guidelines are not passing a judgement, they are merely defining a boundary - something every forum must do.

This forum does not support discussion of TV shows and movie reviews, or rap music, or astrology, yet no one makes accusations of narrow-mindedness.

This forum does not support discussion of personal or undeveloped theories, yet people make accusations of narrow-mindedness.

Every forum MUST draw a line around what it supports and what is outside its purvue. This forum is simply about established science. It's not a judgment, it's simply a boundary.
 
  • #19
Right on, Dave. Another thing I never understood about the people who make these complaints is this all-or-nothing attitude. As in: Either I get to post my theories here or I'll leave the website after making a parting shot in the Feedback Forum. My response is always the same: Why not use PF for what we do allow, and use other message boards to post your speculations? We stick to mainstream science here (except in the IR Forum), and we're very good at it! A person can learn a lot here. But people would rather just leave and trash us elsewhere on the internet. It makes no more sense than storming out of a Chinese restaurant because they won't serve you a pizza. I don't get it.
 
  • #20
Well, now that you mention it...

I have often wondered if that poor reaction is due to the policy and procedure of how an offending post is initially dealt with. This is usually the user's first practical experience with the board's policies, and I imagine it feels surprisingly brusque. I suspect that the user's experience is that of being confronted by a cop, when what they were expecting to be greeted by was a mentor.
 
  • #21
Well, I wrote the form letter that we use when we delete personal theories with just that in mind. Here it is:

Dear PF member,

The post quoted below has been deleted because it contains opinions that are contrary to those currently held by the scientific community. This is against the Posting Guidelines of Physics Forums. If you would like to discuss your ideas, we invite you to submit a post to the Independent Research Forum, subject to the applicable guidelines, found https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=82301.

We appreciate your cooperation, and hope you enjoy the Forums.



The Staff of Physics Forums

(cite thread title here)

*shrug* I think it sounds 'mentorly'.
 
  • #22
Tom Mattson said:
Well, I wrote the form letter that we use when we delete personal theories with just that in mind. Here it is:

Dear PF member,

The post quoted below has been deleted because it contains opinions that are contrary to those currently held by the scientific community. This is against the Posting Guidelines of Physics Forums. If you would like to discuss your ideas, we invite you to submit a post to the Independent Research Forum, subject to the applicable guidelines, found here.

We appreciate your cooperation, and hope you enjoy the Forums.



The Staff of Physics Forums

(cite thread title here)
*shrug* I think it sounds 'mentorly'.
Seems reasonable. :approve:

May be some take exception to being placed in a forum with other "independent researchers". :rolleyes:

How about a "Not Ready for Primetime Research Forum"? :rofl:

Sorry, but I couldn't resist. :biggrin: :uhh:
 
Last edited:
  • #23
This is just my 2c:

You guys have final say, you can afford to be overly-humble about it.

No electrons will be harmed by giving an overly-gentle explanation and providing it before lowering the boom.


The Physics Forum is self-limiting to the discussion of generally-recognized opinions in the scientific community. The Forum also promotes student education, which necessarily concentrates on accepted theories. This is not a judgement, it is merely a boundary.

We do have an Independent Research Forum, where you can discuss your ideas, and we invite you to submit a post there, subject to the applicable guidelines.

When you signed up, you agreed to follow the Physics Forum guidelines. We appreciate your cooperation in this matter.

In light of this, the post quoted below has been locked/deleted. We apologize for the inconvenience and hope you will stick around and participate in our community!
 
  • #24
I don't object to the intro, but the apology at the end is out of the question, IMO. When we are forced to delete posts it is because someone has broken rules that they explicitly agreed to. We shouldn't apologize for that.
 
  • #25
Ok, here is what I think. If you havn't researched the subject for a ~five years straight, you probably won't have mastered the subject to max, and therefore it is a ~bad idea to post in IR. If you have studied it more than five years, you will realize that you need to reach a bigger audience that just PF and you will post in Science/Nature. :D
 
  • #26
"...someone has broken rules that they explicitly agreed to. We shouldn't apologize for that..."

Yep. I understand. My point is merely that, if the ultimate goal is to encourage people to stick around and participate (while following the guidelines of course), it's no skin off your collective noses to straighten their bent nose, even if they were told to watch out for the wall.
 
  • #27
"Bent noses" are personal choices --- and are going to be "bent" no matter what PF staff do or do not do. Leave 'em.
 
  • #28
Tom Mattson said:
It makes no more sense than storming out of a Chinese restaurant because they won't serve you a pizza.

To make the analogy more precise, that should read something like, "because they won't let you in the kitchen to invent your own dishes and then call them Chinese regardless of whether they're authentic or not."
 
  • #29
jtbell said:
To make the analogy more precise, that should read something like, "because they won't let you in the kitchen to invent your own dishes and then call them Chinese regardless of whether they're authentic or not."
:rofl: Good one!
 
  • #30
Wrong. Most of the PF staff either has already earned, or is in the process of earning, a doctoral degree.

It is a safe bet that as far as physics is concerned, this means that they are working on improving the (purely predictive) Quantum theory; but there is more to science than 'prediction' as any other branch of science other will clearly demonstrate.
 
  • #31
jhmar said:
It is a safe bet that as far as physics is concerned, this means that they are working on improving the (purely predictive) Quantum theory; but there is more to science than 'prediction' as any other branch of science other will clearly demonstrate.

What on Earth are you talking about? Do you personally know even a single physicist? The majority of working physicists study solid-state or condensed matter physics.

Furthermore, what kind of scientific model is not purely predictive? That's all a scientific model is -- a machine which can be used to make predictions.

- Warren
 
  • #32
jhmar said:
It is a safe bet that as far as physics is concerned, this means that they are working on improving the (purely predictive) Quantum theory;

:rolleyes: So first you claim that chroot is not honest, and now you claim to know what our professionals do when you obviously haven't looked into it. Your recent posting reeks of presumption and you are making yourself look like a complete dolt, my friend. Our resident holders of advanced degrees in physics specialize in such areas as experimental condensed matter physics, experimental subatomic physics, theoretical subatomic physics, and acclerator physics. I don't know of any that are working on the foundations of quantum theory. But even if they were, so what? That is a perfectly legitimate area of research.

but there is more to science than 'prediction' as any other branch of science other will clearly demonstrate.

Sure, there's also experimentation. We've got both of those bases covered here.
 
  • #34
that forum is in infancy period..
 
  • #35
heman said:
that forum is in infancy period..
I'd say it remains on its foetal stage.
 
<h2>1. What is meant by "personal theories are not welcome" in a scientific context?</h2><p>In science, personal theories refer to ideas or hypotheses that are based on personal beliefs or opinions rather than on empirical evidence or scientific principles. Therefore, when it is stated that personal theories are not welcome, it means that they are not considered valid or acceptable in the scientific community.</p><h2>2. Why are personal theories not accepted in science?</h2><p>Personal theories are not accepted in science because they lack the rigorous testing and evidence-based support that is required for a theory to be considered valid. In science, theories are constantly subject to scrutiny and must be supported by empirical evidence in order to be accepted.</p><h2>3. Can personal theories ever be considered valid in science?</h2><p>In rare cases, personal theories may be considered valid in science if they are able to withstand rigorous testing and are supported by strong empirical evidence. However, this is a rare occurrence and most personal theories do not meet the standards of scientific validity.</p><h2>4. How can I distinguish between a personal theory and a scientifically accepted theory?</h2><p>A scientifically accepted theory is based on empirical evidence, has been extensively tested and supported by multiple studies, and is widely accepted by the scientific community. Personal theories, on the other hand, are based on personal beliefs or opinions and lack the same level of evidence and support.</p><h2>5. Is it important to reject personal theories in science?</h2><p>Yes, it is important to reject personal theories in science because they can hinder the progress of scientific knowledge and understanding. By rejecting personal theories, scientists are able to focus on theories that have been rigorously tested and supported by evidence, leading to a more accurate understanding of the natural world.</p>

1. What is meant by "personal theories are not welcome" in a scientific context?

In science, personal theories refer to ideas or hypotheses that are based on personal beliefs or opinions rather than on empirical evidence or scientific principles. Therefore, when it is stated that personal theories are not welcome, it means that they are not considered valid or acceptable in the scientific community.

2. Why are personal theories not accepted in science?

Personal theories are not accepted in science because they lack the rigorous testing and evidence-based support that is required for a theory to be considered valid. In science, theories are constantly subject to scrutiny and must be supported by empirical evidence in order to be accepted.

3. Can personal theories ever be considered valid in science?

In rare cases, personal theories may be considered valid in science if they are able to withstand rigorous testing and are supported by strong empirical evidence. However, this is a rare occurrence and most personal theories do not meet the standards of scientific validity.

4. How can I distinguish between a personal theory and a scientifically accepted theory?

A scientifically accepted theory is based on empirical evidence, has been extensively tested and supported by multiple studies, and is widely accepted by the scientific community. Personal theories, on the other hand, are based on personal beliefs or opinions and lack the same level of evidence and support.

5. Is it important to reject personal theories in science?

Yes, it is important to reject personal theories in science because they can hinder the progress of scientific knowledge and understanding. By rejecting personal theories, scientists are able to focus on theories that have been rigorously tested and supported by evidence, leading to a more accurate understanding of the natural world.

Similar threads

  • Feedback and Announcements
Replies
19
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
886
  • Feedback and Announcements
Replies
10
Views
3K
Replies
21
Views
637
  • Feedback and Announcements
Replies
1
Views
262
  • Feedback and Announcements
Replies
25
Views
2K
  • Feedback and Announcements
Replies
21
Views
2K
Replies
47
Views
4K
  • Feedback and Announcements
Replies
33
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
50
Views
2K
Back
Top