• Directed panspermia in the "scientific" literature

    From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to All on Tue May 21 14:09:48 2024
    It's mentioned in passing in "Beyond Origins: Evolution and Extinction
    of humans Unraveling the Remarkable Story of Life's Evolution from Single-Celled Organisms to Modern Humans" (https://www.xisdxjxsu.asia/V20I05-17.pdf). Several of the references
    look dodgy*, so I wouldn't trust the attribution of this to Lovelock
    without verification.

    Scare quotes because I don't see why this was publishable even as a
    review article.

    * This paper came up in a Google Scholar Alert because a paper on the
    origins of allotetraploid cotton was in the references, as a citation
    for the statement "The study of the evolution of life on Earth is
    essential in comprehending the origin of the diverse species that
    inhabit our planet today". That's an odd place to cite that particular
    claim; I wondered whether it had been stated as a platitude in the
    abstract or introduction, but it doesn't appear to have been.

    --
    alias Ernest Major

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  • From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to erik simpson on Tue May 21 17:39:38 2024
    On 21/05/2024 17:06, erik simpson wrote:
    On 5/21/24 6:09 AM, Ernest Major wrote:
    It's mentioned in passing in "Beyond Origins: Evolution and Extinction
    of humans Unraveling the Remarkable Story of Life's Evolution from
    Single-Celled Organisms to  Modern Humans"
    (https://www.xisdxjxsu.asia/V20I05-17.pdf). Several of the references
    look dodgy*, so I wouldn't trust the attribution of this to Lovelock
    without verification.

    Scare quotes because I don't see why this was publishable even as a
    review article.

    * This paper came up in a Google Scholar Alert because a paper on the
    origins of allotetraploid cotton was in the references, as a citation
    for the statement "The study of the evolution of life on Earth is
    essential in comprehending the origin of the diverse species that
    inhabit our planet today". That's an odd place to cite that particular
    claim; I wondered whether it had been stated as a platitude in the
    abstract or introduction, but it doesn't appear to have been.

    A weird paper, from a weird journal.  I won't say weird authors, because I've never heard of them. (Not pejorative; most people have never heard
    of me either.)  The "directed panspermia" seems to be included for the
    sake of presenting all suggested possibilities.  "Dodgy" is a good description.


    My list of possibilities for the origin of life is considerably longer,
    with spontaneous abiogenesis at the top of the list, local panspermia in
    a distant second place, and a collection of implausible also runs; if
    they were attempting all possibilities they need more imagination.

    Looking at the boilerplate immediately before the references I garnered
    the impression that the authors are undergraduates at a university in
    Pakistan. The subject would be a reasonable topic for an article in a
    popular science magazine - I look askance at the anthropocentrism, but I
    see how it fits the audience there - but for a scientific journal
    there's supposed to be degree of novelty even if it's only the first
    assemblage of an overview of results in a field. What gets me is the
    failure of the editorial process - it appears to be the house journal of
    a Chinese university, not an imprint of a predatory commercial
    publisher, and I'd expect quality controls, especially on externally
    submitted papers.

    --
    alias Ernest Major

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ernest Major@21:1/5 to erik simpson on Tue May 21 22:11:31 2024
    On 21/05/2024 18:21, erik simpson wrote:
    On 5/21/24 9:39 AM, Ernest Major wrote:
    On 21/05/2024 17:06, erik simpson wrote:
    On 5/21/24 6:09 AM, Ernest Major wrote:
    It's mentioned in passing in "Beyond Origins: Evolution and
    Extinction of humans Unraveling the Remarkable Story of Life's
    Evolution from Single-Celled Organisms to  Modern Humans"
    (https://www.xisdxjxsu.asia/V20I05-17.pdf). Several of the
    references look dodgy*, so I wouldn't trust the attribution of this
    to Lovelock without verification.

    Scare quotes because I don't see why this was publishable even as a
    review article.

    * This paper came up in a Google Scholar Alert because a paper on
    the origins of allotetraploid cotton was in the references, as a
    citation for the statement "The study of the evolution of life on
    Earth is essential in comprehending the origin of the diverse
    species that inhabit our planet today". That's an odd place to cite
    that particular claim; I wondered whether it had been stated as a
    platitude in the abstract or introduction, but it doesn't appear to
    have been.

    A weird paper, from a weird journal.  I won't say weird authors,
    because I've never heard of them. (Not pejorative; most people have
    never heard of me either.)  The "directed panspermia" seems to be
    included for the sake of presenting all suggested possibilities.
    "Dodgy" is a good description.


    My list of possibilities for the origin of life is considerably
    longer, with spontaneous abiogenesis at the top of the list, local
    panspermia in a distant second place, and a collection of implausible
    also runs; if they were attempting all possibilities they need more
    imagination.

    Looking at the boilerplate immediately before the references I
    garnered the impression that the authors are undergraduates at a
    university in Pakistan. The subject would be a reasonable topic for an
    article in a popular science magazine - I look askance at the
    anthropocentrism, but I see how it fits the audience there - but for a
    scientific journal there's supposed to be degree of novelty even if
    it's only the first assemblage of an overview of results in a field.
    What gets me is the failure of the editorial process - it appears to
    be the house journal of a Chinese university, not an imprint of a
    predatory commercial publisher, and I'd expect quality controls,
    especially on externally submitted papers.

    There are a number of gratuitous mistakes in their anthropocentic line.
    Many of their dates are seriously wrong, and "pelycosaurs" are at best
    stem synapsids and probably paraphyletic. They could have paraphrased a
    lot of this from Wikipedia and made a better job. If the authors are
    indeed undergrads and this is a group "term paper", I'd give it no more
    than C, if that.


    I concur. The dates are not only often wrong, but are inconsistent
    within the paper.
    --
    alias Ernest Major

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)