This seems like a clumsy and spastic criticism of the Cuntz, et al paper. Don't get me wrong, just as happens like 99% of the time, some science paper sweeps some assumptions under the rug and some university PR machine hypes it beyond what is reasonable.<p>But there is no hint in any of this that people are privileging scientific inquiry above other kinds of inquiry. I'm certain that any of the paper's authors would admit straight away that they had to make assumptions (that is just called <i>all of science</i>) and that the assumptions, which they might argue are defensible, can certainly be criticized by others. Indeed, their assumptions seem very reasonable to me, I see no fault with making the assumptions they made (even if other academics in turn can point out improvements upon those assumptions), and I consider it good science for them to turn the problem into an analytical one clearly by making such assumptions.<p>I can't comment on the near allegations of plagiarism. The fact that an earlier paper made a similar claim does not seem really at all relevant to me though. At least from what is quoted in this piece, the two don't seem directly related, and it's extremely common for a result such as this to be rediscovered sometime later. You can complain that they should have done better legwork to identify the earlier work, but that kind of complaint is extremely different and not nearly such a grave accusation as plagiarism.<p>I more blame PR hype machines (especially universities) for the attitude that it's reasonable to trumpet results up beyond the weight of the actual arguments they make. "Scientists" aren't doing that, except in so far as they play bullshit PR games to get papers published, just like academics in every other field, including historians.<p>I think maybe this person should read <i>That Chocolate Study</i> on Slate Star Codex [0] and calm down a minute. Either we fix what's wrong with the reward system that forces academics to behave this way when publishing, or else we expect the basic literacy of anyone consuming headlines derived from research papers is insanely high and that they will account for possible errors, misleading hype, need for more data, challenging assumptions, etc., on their own.<p>It doesn't seem super productive to me, though, to make a whiny fit about what some other academics did in order to publish their paper. It's a whiny fit that's been thrown over and over and over with no results ever.<p>[0] < <a href="http://slatestarcodex.com/2015/05/30/that-chocolate-study/" rel="nofollow">http://slatestarcodex.com/2015/05/30/that-chocolate-study/</a> >