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So Does This Mean Science Is Bullshit?

Nick Gillespie | 4.18.2005 11:13 AM


Via Plastic comes this CNN report of an incoherent, computer-generated paper being accepted for presentation at an academic conference.

[A trio of] MIT graduate students questioned the standards of some academic conferences, so they wrote a computer program to generate research papers complete with "context-free grammar," charts and diagrams.

The trio submitted two of the randomly assembled papers to the World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics (WMSCI), scheduled to be held July 10-13 in Orlando, Florida.

To their surprise, one of the papers--"Rooter: A Methodology for the Typical Unification of Access Points and Redundancy"--was accepted for presentation.

The prank recalled a 1996 hoax in which New York University physicist Alan Sokal succeeded in getting an entire paper with a mix of truths, falsehoods, non sequiturs and otherwise meaningless mumbo-jumbo published in the quarterly journal Social Text, published by Duke University Press.

Whole thing here.

The MIT pranksters' site is here.

Stuff about the Sokal hoax here.

Nick Gillespie is an editor at large at Reason and host of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.