Chris, Malenfant,
after so many things have been said and unfortunately misunderstood in part, let me try to summarize once more the issue that I for my part was/am concerned about. I will do that mostly by quoting from my own posts to make clear that my
concern has NOT changed in any way throughout the discussion.
Also clearly it is NOT the matter of being right or wrong as concerns myself.
Since decades I have been involved in peer-reviewing for the world's leading scientific physics journals. I think I do have all qualifications to judge the scientific value of such presentations from a
senior physicists perspective.
Right from the beginning of this discussion, I asked about the
scientific value of the existing information.
t00fri wrote:I was of course aware of the Venera landers (never claimed there was
no landing on Venus). But I don't know
what scientific value some color remastering by a guy on a site with the "inspiring" .com name
" www.
mentallandscape.com"
has ...
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NOTE: This question does NOT interfere in any way with possible usefulness of the material for popular illustration/motivation/education purposes, of course.
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I then clearly confronted the situation with that of Titan, where I was given the respective official publication in the
acclaimed scientific journal "Nature" by the Cyclops lead scientist, after much useful communication with him about the (astro)physics background.
This should have become clear in my response to Spiff:
t00fri wrote:After the Soviets spent lots of money & effort to get to Venus, they also must have had an interest to
publish their
solid scientific results on behalf of the Venera mission in accepted international journals!
30 years ago, they have certainly done so already in my field of particle physics! [Edit: I have attended in this time window quite a number of international conferences in different locations of the Soviet Union, without major difficulties to enter and move around!]
Therefore, I want to see the original publications containing these potentially very important color images.
It is just a ridiculous thought to imagine that only a few space
artists managed to evaluate and publish their GREAT color imaging data!!!
If the lead scientists from Venera believed these images to be reliable, they would have pushed to get their names out on respective papers. You BET!
Where are they??
Again it is obvious that my essential concern is about the
scientifically valid information available. Personally, I care little about popular level imaging that I could do myself if I so wanted.
I emphasized the different aspects involved explicitly to Chris:
t00fri wrote:please understand. There are different levels on which one may argue.
When I am with my beer at night, I am certainly a vivid admirer of space art and anything else that looks exciting in this domain
But when it comes to the potential evaluation of /important/ scientific claims --and such color images of Venus ARE important-- then I am turning into the professional scientist that I am since decades!
And on that scale, only "bona fide" published results can be considered seriously.
Could you imagine that I cite a Website in my next paper?? Come on...
Any one of my senior colleagues worldwide would judge about this matter in the same way.
Since I was only concerned about the scientific value of Don Mitchel's work, I then had a look at his professional profile. There was no PhD in physics/astrophysics/planetary science/... mentioned, but instead:
t00fri wrote:From his picture he seems definitely below 40, say. He calls himself a "retired research scientist" with professional experience at Bells lab and Microsoft!
...
Such a career is not of the kind where I blindly believe what I get to read, when it comes to scientific results.
There is no need to emphasize that
reliable, truely scientific analysis of such complex, old mission data need far more
proven planetary/experimental physics experience. A previous software job at
Microsoft at best underligns his experience with computing!
If he had instead provided a list of scientific, refereed papers on his Website, I certainly would have read those instead. I would have been able in that case to form a more solid scientific opinion.
Finally, let me make clear a crucial subtlety: Sure enough people without
proven professional qualifications as scientists may possibly also do valuable and interesting work related to science. Notably in connection with computing.
But the respective scientific value is usually hard to asses, since the specialized training and experience in highly qualified research teams of institutions with proven reputation was lacking. Also previous jobs at good places help to asses people's qualification, since with each new job the applicants went through careful professional screening of their specific qualifications...
NOTE: For postdoc and faculty job
applications of scientists at virtually all decent research institutions in physics worldwide, ALL publications that have NOT been peer-reviewed are
ignored.
It is unavoidable that evaluation of the scientific value of some such work, is largely also a matter of
confidence in the qualifications and the working philosophy of the person concerned. The only alternative would be to redo the same analysis and compare. That is clearly impractical in practice! That's why previous formal qualifications and proven experience play a crucial role virtually in case of every institution, company etc.
Scientific analysis/work is concerned with extracting
TRUE results from Nature. Because of that, usually the hardest part of scientific work relies in a
careful estimation and publication of inherent uncertainties etc. Also "limits of knowledge" must be clearly exhibited!
That part makes up for the greatest difference to work of more popular interest, including work for educational purposes.
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I sincerely hope that this summary of my point of view, along with comments on some generally accepted aspects of scientific working, was useful to some extent.
In this discussion, my primary concern has been the important question of
existing scientifically reliable (color) information about the surface of Venus!. This question does interfere little with issues about the possible usefulness of the existing material for popular illustration/motivation/education purposes.
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Bye Fridger