Duh.
A scientist is a person who conducts scientific research to advance knowledge in an area of interest.
In other words, anyone can be a scientist by simply doing research to advance knowledge in an area of interest. That includes the drunk, above. Who are you to discount his knowledge, simply because he likes alcohol?
This is why it's a genetic fallacy.
And if the drunk, or perhaps the pastor/talkshow host, is right and the "expert" is wrong, and that trend continues, then we should doubt what the "expert" says and pay more attention to the former. If it's the other way around, then sure, we can discount the former, and pay more attention to the latter, based on the evidence.
The problem is that you want to skip looking at the evidence and only focus on what the "expert" says, because he's an "expert." That is, by definition, a genetic fallacy, and not only that, but it's also an appeal to authority. First, you must examine what the person says, and if it is true, or if it false, act accordingly. Skipping that step only results in confirmation bias.
Irrelevant.
You cannot make that decision until you have examined all aspects of any given claim, by any claimant. That includes that of a drunk, or of a pastor.
And if the drunk is right, and the "expert" is wrong, what then? How would you know, when you only listen to the "expert?"
Saying it doesn't make it so, and the fact that it's "messy" should tell you why.
So what? That doesn't mean we have to rely on experts to tell us what to believe.
I came across some advice recently when watching a youtube video on something in the tech industry, and as someone who is somewhat of a tech enthusiast myself, who had experienced something similar, it made a lot of sense. The person who said it said something along the lines of, "if you're doing research into something, and you don't understand even half the terms being used, just pay attention to the context they're being used in, and keep researching, because the next time you come across those terms, they'll make more sense to you."
In other words, just because you don't understand something, if you're immersing yourself in that knowledge regularly, you'll quickly become familiar with those terms, even if you don't know how those things work exactly, which will help you learn other things related to those terms.
Yes, that's my point. You are the first one to bring it up. No one else has mentioned it, has needed to.
Saying it doesn't make it so.
Skeeter, you're literally defending the use of a genetic fallacy, that makes you wrong, ipso facto.
"The genetic fallacy (also known as the fallacy of origins or fallacy of virtue) is a fallacy of irrelevance in which arguments or information are dismissed or validated based solely on their source of origin rather than their content. In other words, a claim is ignored or given credibility based on its source rather than the claim itself." - Wikipedia entry for Genetic Fallacy
Those limitations include being unable to determine whether a claim is true or false based on the origin of that claim. You refuse to acknowledge this limitation.
Appeal to ridicule fallacy.
Appeal to authority fallacy.
Appeal to the stone fallacy.
And if the expert is wrong, what then?
Speak for yourself.
Now you're defending appealing to authority, another fallacy.
How low can you go, Skeeter?
Are you sure about that?
Again, speak for yourself.
Peer review is not consensus, nor vice versa.
Wrong.
As per NCBI:
"Peer review is intended to serve two primary purposes. Firstly, it acts as a filter to ensure that only high quality research is published, especially in reputable journals, by determining the validity, significance and originality of the study. Secondly, peer review is intended to improve the quality of manuscripts that are deemed suitable for publication. Peer reviewers provide suggestions to authors on how to improve the quality of their manuscripts, and also identify any errors that need correcting before publication."
Peer review has been defined as a process of subjecting an author’s scholarly work, research or ideas to the scrutiny of others who are experts in the same field. It functions to encourage authors to meet the accepted high standards of their ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
That only works with people who are open to evidence, and who do not discount a claim or evidence simply based on its origins.
Which still does not make it ok to reject or promote a claim or evidence over another based on its origin.