(January 3, 2018 at 4:05 pm)alpha male Wrote:(December 28, 2017 at 11:08 pm)Astreja Wrote: I work in medicine, and regularly read abstracts when looking for information for correspondence I'm typing. Sometimes I speed-read the whole paper. There are also a few conditions where for my own interest I'm constantly on the lookout for new developments -- in particular, treatment of lymphedema and fibromyalgia.
It's comparatively easy for me to access journals without a personal subscription -- if I can't just pull them up on my browser at work, I can pop over to the local medical library and read them there. (In fact, many years ago, I had a temporary position where I regularly pulled journal articles that my boss needed for her own research. I know how to find these things.)
I only use "pop" science as a starting point. If I have no need to dig deeper I just use those articles as mental bookmarks so that I can track down the good stuff later. I have enough competence in the basic sciences to determine whether an article is a plausible new development, a rehash of something I was already aware of, or flat-out nonsense.
Yeah, you know how to find these things, yet no links follow.![]()
Admit it, the vast majority of what you think you know about abiogenesis or evolution didn't come from reading peer-reviewed studies.
For me it isn't about the strength of peer reviewed research regarding abiogenesis. Maybe we someday demonstrate how it could happen, maybe we don't. But, whatever the mechanism/secret sauce, non-supernatural means is the operative assumption until we find even one non-controversial instance of supernatural causation.