DailyDirt: Winning A Nobel Prize And Thinking Differently
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
A fairly sizable list of Nobel laureates suffer from Nobel disease — a phenomenon in which respected scientists publicly espouse somewhat crazy ideas. Perhaps just being famous also causes this affliction…? Or maybe there should be more research on this topic, worthy of an Ig Nobel award. In any case, here are a few links on some Nobel prize winners that demonstrate these people are still human.
- Nobel laureate James Watson, famous for eludicating the helical structure of DNA, recently auctioned off his medal for over $4 million. The winning bid came from Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov who says he’ll return the medal to Watson. [url]
- Nobel laureates in Chemistry seem to like giving advice to others. Ada Yonath had some sage advice: “Go into science if you are curious and have passion for it. If not, find something else.” [url]
- Kary Mullis, the inventor of PCR who won the Nobel prize in chemistry in 1993, supported research suggesting that AIDS is not caused by HIV. The scientific evidence is overwhelming against the assertion that HIV and AIDS are unrelated, but Mullis isn’t convinced. [url]
- Linus Pauling won not just one, but TWO Nobel prizes. However, these credentials didn’t prevent him from spouting some crazy unsupported statements, such as asserting that megadoses of vitamin C can prevent colds and death from cancers. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post via StumbleUpon.
Filed Under: james watson, kary mullis, linus pauling, megadose, nobel disease, nobel prize, vitamin c
Comments on “DailyDirt: Winning A Nobel Prize And Thinking Differently”
Wording
I believe nearly every scientist would support research that suggests a current theory is wrong.
Re: Wording
The scientific community is addled with ridicule and hubris.
Go and look at the annals of history where more than plenty of great inventors were scoffed at and resisted by the scientific community… prompting this old saying.
Science progresses one funeral at a time.
Or better yet…
“A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.”
~Max Planck
What you seem to be saying
Is that the consensus is always right and nobody should bother questioning it?
Just curious.
Re: What you seem to be saying
If the consensus is backed by the available evidence, and the opposing idea(s) aren’t, then yeah, I’d say go with the consensus. If both sides have solid, verifiable evidence backing their positions, then that means it’s time to do more research, and see about reconciling the difference.
Re: Re: What you seem to be saying
This is a very nice answer that doesn’t actually mean anything. AS A FUCKING LAYMAN, who doesn’t have access / time / expertise to evaluate the evidence, how do you determine? (My choice is: the consensus is usually wrong, but I’m in the minority :P.)
Re: Re: Re: What you seem to be saying
You don’t need to have an opinion, and if you must, then go with the dominant position among scholars.
Re: Re: truth by consensus always ends well
Why not ‘go with the evidence’? [assuming it exists]
Just because someone’s smart in one field, doesn’t mean they’re not an idiot in another.
Watson
The difference being that in the case of Watson, that his comments were not crazy but firmly supported by the evidence. This is not the case for Mullis or Pauling’s ideas.
E.g. a review of the evidence is here: http://www.gnxp.com/blog/2007/10/james-watson-tells-inconvenient-truth_296.php
no bell prize?
Ignoring the heat from the sun driving the climate can win one a nobel prize. Tyrants have won nobel prizes.
Other than melting down the gold trophy why should anyone care about recipients ‘accomplishments’?
the nobel prize system just isn’t all that prestigious anymore.
You have people that buy their way in, people that are awarded just to make a political statement.
Linus Pauling
Pauling is an example of anyone who decides to weigh in on an area outside of his/her field of expertise, and depends on their celebrity status to carry the day. That kind of hubris isn’t just restricted to scientists. Every day you hear about actors, politicians, and so on (even on this site) pontificating on subjects they have no knowledge of.
Intellectual integrity is truly a rare thing.
I suppose if you die from a vitamin C overdose, your chances of catching a cold or being diagnosed with cancer do drop significantly.
I don’t know about preventing colds and cancers, but vitamin C megadoses can dramatically reduce the amount of time you spend sick once you actually catch the cold.
Quackery
Linus Pauling is hardly a quack, and as far as hubris, he took no end of flack and loss of reputation for fighting against above ground nuclear testing, which they’ve calculated killed 10k or more Americans. He was branded a communist for wanting to save American lives.
Now if you look at the average life span of doctors, they live a few years less than the average person. Meanwhile all of the doctors I’ve been able to find that took 1 gram or more vit c till the end, lived on average about 9 years longer than the average person. Guess who’s advice I’m going to take.