Originally posted by russ_watters
A tour guide site for Stonehenge doesn't pass my credibility test as being a reliable source of scientific information.
It wouldn't pass mine either. Where is this tour guide site to stonehenge you speak of? The link has the word "stonehenge" in it and you have invented the "tour guide site" part from thin air. You are distorting the facts, then criticizing the facts for the distortions you added yourself. This is completely unacceptable.
Here is the link again:
scienceofcropcircles
Address:
http://www.stonehenge-avebury.net/scienceofcropcircles.htm
Where is the "tour guide site"?
Therefore I refused to even read the link.
You refused to even read the link based on a distortion you invented in your own mind. This is completely unacceptable by all standards of academia and science. If you read the site then your criticisms have the potential of being dead on. As it is, everything you say about it is completely worthless.
Ok, first sentence: So, this "article" makes the same assumption that Ivan does. It ignores step 1 of the process:
Step 1: Prove that not all crop circles are man made.
The article presents evidence upon which a convincing argument can start to be built. It presents two eyewitness accounts, the first by a spectroscopist who finds roughly circular formations in a field after a storm, and which he believes were the direct result of the storm, the second by a farmer who actually sees a whirlwind make this kind of formation in a field of crops.
I have copied these two accounts into this thread in my post addressed to selfAdjoint above. (10-25-2003 12:32 A.M.)
Whirlwinds and dust devils are exceptionally common phenomena. Crop fields are exceptionally common. It would be nice to have a video of a whirlwind touching down and swirling some crops into a flat rough circle, but, since it is already so well known that they do touch down briefly in one spot and then retreat back into the sky, it is pretty much obvious what kind of pattern they would leave in a crop field, if they did it there.
The two guys with the board and a rope who admitted to hoaxing them for years said they were inspired by reports of people finding circles in their crops. I strongly suspect all the pre-hoax reports of crop circles arose from ones made by whirlwinds.
Now, by your reasoning, it is OK to dismiss a whole article based on the first sentence. Let's apply this to another article. Here's the first sentence:
"In your schooldays most of you who read this book made acquaintance with the noble building of Euclid's geometry, and you remember - perhaps with more respect than love - the magnificent structure on the lofty staircase of which you were chased about for uncounted hours by conscientious teachers."
What kind of pseudo-scientific nutcase starts off a supposedly scientific paper with a sentence full of lame poetic cr*p like this? "...the lofty staircase of which you were chased for uncounted hours by conscientious teachers." Sounds like a veiled reference to pederasty to me. By Russ-Watter's, reakoning, therefore, we can dismiss everything that follows. I think, though, there are a lot of people a PF who are glad this paper wasn't dismissed based on this bad first sentence.