Exploring Crackpot Notions: A Debunking Site for Logical Discussions

  • Thread starter Andy
  • Start date
In summary, the forum does not allow discussions about crackpot notions because it is a waste of time and resources.
  • #1
Andy
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Origionally Posted by DH
This site is not an ally in this cause. Debating people who are immune to logic and evidence is a no-win situation. We do not discuss crackpot notions at this site.

Whats wrong with discussing crackpot notions? It was crackpot notions that made this website soo much fun.
 
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  • #2
I'm not sure that it's always wrong to discuss them, as long as none of the comments appear to lend credence to them. We used to have some good laughs over some of them for a page or two. (Only in GD, though.)
 
  • #3
I should have pointed out that crackpot notions should be kept in the GD forum, although just about anything to do with physics could be described as crackpot mumbo jumbo by someone all depends on what you beleive.

We could do with some of the old crackpots like entropy, tribdog or MRP back, they where always good for a laugh.
 
  • #4
Crackpot is not pseudoscience. A real crackpot makes falsifiable statements. They're just not popular among contemperaries. String theory is considered crackpot by some, but it still pulls a lot of funding.
 
  • #5
Pythagorean said:
Crackpot is not pseudoscience. A real crackpot makes falsifiable statements. They're just not popular among contemperaries. String theory is considered crackpot by some, but it still pulls a lot of funding.

Would you expand on this? In particular, how do you define "crackpot" and "pseudoscience"?

I'm accustomed to (what I call) crackpots failing to make falsifiable predictions, and I know that the same accusation has been leveled against string theory (or at least M-theory).
 
  • #6
Holy Schmoly! Good to see you around here again, Andy. The problem was that crackpots are only fun for so long, then they got tiresome and tedious when the same arguments went in the same circles over and over.

I have to agree with CRGreathouse that the crackpots make statements that are not falsifiable, which makes them not scientific, and near impossible to debate. (If the statements are falsifiable, it's still science, even if not necessarily well-supported and likely to be quickly disproven.) They were really only entertaining to poke sticks at and laugh about, but too much work to keep contained as the site grew.
 
  • #7
So if told you that i thought the entire universe had been created by one single supreme being, would that make me a crackpot?
 
  • #8
CRGreathouse:

"Crank" is a pejorative term used for a person who unshakably holds a belief that most of his or her contemporaries consider to be false.[1][1] Crank at Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary

There was a lot of criticism against string theory before predictions made and experiments were designed.
 
  • #9
Yeah I don't believe that thread should have been closed. Crackpot in what sense? I'm sure at the time just as it is now with global warming there would have been fierce debates on both sides.

Perhaps looking on how it was handled could give us a better understanding of what is happening with this global warming fiasco of now.
 
  • #10
Andy said:
So if told you that i thought the entire universe had been created by one single supreme being, would that make me a crackpot?

Yes, because you made an unfalsifiable statement that also has no meaning.

This forum may have started, way back when, when everything goes. But as time progressed and the number of members increased (along with the number of postings), moderating such crackpottery because time consuming and incommensurate to any kind of value that one could get out of such a thing. So we decided that PF can't be everything to everyone. There are already an overwhelming number of public forums where such crackpottery are accepted. What's wrong with reserving a very minuscule part of the internet to something that caters only to a high signal-to-noise ratio? The crackpots have so many other places to air their dirty laundry.

I also would think that had we continue to cater to such crackpottery, we won't have garnered the same type of respect that we have had these past few years. I would highly doubt that Scientific American would partner and promote this forum had we continue along such line. But more importantly, we certainly will have a tougher time attracting professionals in the relevant areas to participate in this forum.

Zz.
 
  • #11
Andy said:
So if told you that i thought the entire universe had been created by one single supreme being, would that make me a crackpot?

If it was a discussion about personal beliefs, it would probably be okay. If you tried to argue that your belief is a fact, or if you injected your beliefs into other discussions, then you would be in trouble. Personal beliefs don't require justification, but statements of fact do.

Also, science has nothing to say about a God, so it would generally be inappropriate to interject such beliefs in most discussions, be it pro or con. In either case one would be a crackpot.
 
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  • #12
ZapperZ said:
Andy said:
So if told you that i thought the entire universe had been created by one single supreme being, would that make me a crackpot?
Yes, because you made an unfalsifiable statement that also has no meaning.
I disagree with ZapperZ's answer. Just because Andy made an unfalsifiable statement does not make him a crackpot. There are after all plenty of scientists who do not see any inherent conflict between their religious beliefs and their scientific endeavors. Andy would have had to gone quite a bit further with his statement before it verged into the realm of psychoceramics.

So we decided that PF can't be everything to everyone. There are already an overwhelming number of public forums where such crackpottery are accepted. ...
I agree with everything else Zapper stated in that post.

To add one thing: This forum has evolved to the point that its primary purpose is to help students. Allowing crackpot notions to flourish at this site would be a disservice to this primary objective. Those crackpot discussion threads tended to go on and on and have very high post counts. Students often do not have the requisite knowledge to distinguish crackpottery from valid science. A student who doesn't know better might well have seen the huge amount of traffic in those crackpot threads as a sign that the notion being discussed is not only a valid subject but an important one at that.
 
  • #13
D H said:
... Students often do not have the requisite knowledge to distinguish crackpottery from valid science. ...
Our rules help but what can we do to help them realize how "so much crap" is out there so they get started in the right direction? Just wondering.
 
  • #14
dlgoff said:
Our rules help but what can we do to help them realize how "so much crap" is out there so they get started in the right direction? Just wondering.
Perhaps a locked sticky thread listing various crackpot topics that come up.

This would show them what's not valid science, yet would allow no discussions.
 
  • #15
I can't argue with anything anyone has said (mainly because your all smarter than me) but surely if someone where to come up with a crackpot discussion you smart people would be able enlighten them? Obviously if that person where to be immune to common sense and a good sensible argument then the thread should be locked.

I only brought this up as i thought it was abit unfair to lock someones thread without really providing an answer to his/her question.
 
  • #16
D H said:
I disagree with ZapperZ's answer. Just because Andy made an unfalsifiable statement does not make him a crackpot. There are after all plenty of scientists who do not see any inherent conflict between their religious beliefs and their scientific endeavors. Andy would have had to gone quite a bit further with his statement before it verged into the realm of psychoceramics.

An unfalsifiable statement, by itself, is not a crackpot statement. If it is, then all religions are crackpottery (one could make ample arguments there in of itself). However, within the context of physics and being posted on physics forum for consideration to be evaluated using physics, an unfalsifiable statement like that is crackpottery.

Zz.
 
  • #17
Andy said:
I can't argue with anything anyone has said (mainly because your all smarter than me) but surely if someone where to come up with a crackpot discussion you smart people would be able enlighten them? Obviously if that person where to be immune to common sense and a good sensible argument then the thread should be locked.

I only brought this up as i thought it was abit unfair to lock someones thread without really providing an answer to his/her question.

Again, we have to consider (i) the effort put in (ii) the benefit from such an effort (iii) are they worth the effort? From my experience both here on PF, and my involvement in the Usenet from way back in 1989 (I'm dating myself), I see almost ZERO worth in engaging from such an effort. The "learning" factor is often trampled by other crackpots joining in the fun. In fact, I have plenty of anecdotal evidence where people who sincerely wanted to learn simply tune out when the discussion got so convoluted that no one could understand who was saying what. We have had such a thing happening here on PF. I will strongly argue that the educational "worth" is insufficient to warrant the effort when compared to the hassle and confusion injected into such a discussion.

Zz.
 
  • #18
Agreed but the thread that was locked (cant remember what it was called but something to do with the ozone layer) without allowing anybody to even attempt to discuss the subject. Surely the mentors can monitor the discussion and if it turns into some crazy crackpot discussion then they could shut it down.
 
  • #19
and when it comes to wasteing server space, has anyone seen the PF random thoughts thread? Or the the best songs ever thread?
 
  • #20
Andy said:
and when it comes to wasteing server space, has anyone seen the PF random thoughts thread? Or the the best songs ever thread?

Try checking the archives for the "Thread Killer Thread"... :eek:
 
  • #21
Andy said:
Agreed but the thread that was locked (cant remember what it was called but something to do with the ozone layer) without allowing anybody to even attempt to discuss the subject. Surely the mentors can monitor the discussion and if it turns into some crazy crackpot discussion then they could shut it down.

You made a generalized complaint against our policy, so that is what I responded to. If you have an issue with an action taken against a particular thread, then you should contact the responsible Mentor, rather than making a blanket statement against our policy. These are two different issues.

Andy said:
and when it comes to wasteing server space, has anyone seen the PF random thoughts thread? Or the the best songs ever thread?

And how big of a fraction of PF are those two threads? And where are they located? No one will confuse those with serious discussion, and no rational person will look to those to learn about science. It isn't a waste of time as far as the Mentors are concerned, because we hardly have to put any effort into moderating such threads.

Zz.
 
  • #22
Andy said:
and when it comes to wasteing server space, has anyone seen the PF random thoughts thread? Or the the best songs ever thread?
Nobody has used wasting server space as a justification for our crackdown on crackpot threads. If that was the rationale it has failed miserably. This philosophy to focus on science is a part of the reason why PF has grown so in traffic, number of users, and number of posts in the past five years.
 
  • #23
The "learning" factor is often trampled by other crackpots joining in the fun. In fact, I have plenty of anecdotal evidence where people who sincerely wanted to learn simply tune out when the discussion got so convoluted that no one could understand who was saying what.

I would have thought that it was down to the mentors to allow the discussion to continue until it went off topic? And once it had gotten off topic then it is down to the mentors to either put the thread back on topic or to lock the thread?

And my apolagies for the comment about server space, i thought i read it in this thread but must have been from another thread.
 
  • #24
Andy said:
I would have thought that it was down to the mentors to allow the discussion to continue until it went off topic? And once it had gotten off topic then it is down to the mentors to either put the thread back on topic or to lock the thread?

It has nothing to do with it going off topic. It has everything to do with the level of noise and garbage being spewed. And not only that, things like this are like crap attracting flies. When you allow such topics and discussion, inevitably, they attract other crackpots to the forum since they tend to find these things simply by googling. These are the LAST type of people that we want to attract. And crackpots have no desire to learn anything. All they care about are either disrupting or airing their ideas.

Monitoring such discussion takes A LOT of effort. Crackpottery are very difficult to follow and takes an inordinate amount of time, simply because (i) they tend to describe things in non-standard way using non-standard terminology and (ii) they tend to purposely or inadvertently make things confusing.

Again, your argument here is simply asking for them to be allowed, without any indication of cost-versus-benefit consideration. I've pointed out several different reasons why we do not allow such a thing. We really can't do something just because...

In any case, this is all rather moot. It is clearly stated in our PF Rules as of today. And as far as I've seen so far, there are no compelling reasons to change that rule. Your issue with one particular thread does not diminish the reason why we have that rule.

Zz.
 

1. What is "Exploring Crackpot Notions"?

"Exploring Crackpot Notions" is a website dedicated to debunking and discussing illogical and outlandish ideas. It aims to promote critical thinking and logical discussions by providing evidence-based arguments against crackpot notions.

2. Who can benefit from visiting this site?

Anyone who is interested in logical discussions and debunking pseudo-science can benefit from visiting this site. It is especially useful for individuals who want to improve their critical thinking skills and learn to identify and refute unfounded claims.

3. What types of crackpot notions are covered on this site?

This site covers a wide range of crackpot notions, including conspiracy theories, pseudoscience, and other illogical ideas. It also addresses common misconceptions and myths in science and provides evidence-based explanations to debunk them.

4. How does "Exploring Crackpot Notions" promote logical discussions?

The site provides carefully researched and evidence-based arguments against crackpot notions. It encourages readers to think critically and question unfounded claims. It also allows for open discussions and debates in the comment section.

5. Is this site biased towards certain beliefs or ideologies?

No, "Exploring Crackpot Notions" is not biased towards any specific beliefs or ideologies. Its main objective is to promote critical thinking and logical discussions by debunking illogical ideas regardless of their origin or source.

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