Such a good story. I am thinking that with the internet and Google an idea seems to get out there all right. I see my own threads coming up on Google searches. My main thread was over on Physforum in the biology section.This is blatantly false. As an example almost 50 years ago now, one of my sisters took a science project to the national competition, in Minneapolis. She did not win, which at that time may have been in part a reflection of her sex, rather than the project itself. A little over twenty years ago, two researchers looking into disease vectors on one of the Caribbean islands, published a paper identifying for the first time, several disease vectors, insect vectors and cited the basic idea as originating from that very science project, at the Minneapolis Science Fair. A science project from a high school student.
While it is unlikely that anyone considered a lay person, will ever in today's scientific community, be published..., it is not beyond reasonable potential that a lay person might have an idea or perspective that results in a change in perspective or the advancement of knowledge. All that is required is that the idea or perspective be picked up by someone with the social scientific credentials to pursue and publish....
This is as much an encouragement for the lay public to remain engaged in science, as it is a sad stamenet of what could be described as a shortfall, in the "social scientific" community of today.... If Einstein were a patent clerk in today's world, his work would not have been published...
It is such a long thread now, it takes weeks to read it, but there were 4 major new hypotheses in there. It is a laugh really, but my thoughts have at least got out there. Every few weeks there is something that is discovered that backs me up. Will life ever be traced back to Mercury? Who knows, but I'm proposing it and now there are new suggestions that it could be a possibility now that water has been confirmed there.
This thread where I'm thinking some of the rotational speed of a planet is from its own winds seemed "huge" and "exciting" topic to discuss.
Last edited: