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This Paper Argues an Amulet May Protect from COVID. Should It Have Been Published?

A widely ridiculed paper about jade amulets possibly protecting against COVID-19 makes us wonder what systems are in place to review outlandish claims.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not a hoax! It鈥檚 not a hoax!鈥 Dr. Moses Turkle Bility, assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh, told me over Zoom. And I believe him.

When I stumbled upon, which was published in a legitimate journal and which argued that a jade-nephrite amulet may prevent COVID-19, I my incredulity about it. I was inundated with responses from people who were similarly appalled and who were calling for the university and the journal to comment. How had this gotten published?

It didn鈥檛 help that the paper made use of words like 鈥渟erpentinization鈥 and 鈥渂iogenic molecules鈥, and that it spun disciplines such as geophysics, public health, and quantum physics into an elaborate, gonzo-sounding theory. 鈥淧eople have made provocative hypotheses before and everyone has been OK with it,鈥 Dr. Bility told me.

This paper seemingly reopens the door to an old question: how unorthodox can your ideas be and still get published in the scientific literature?

An exercise in not being jaded

Dr. Bility鈥檚 鈥淐OVID amulet鈥 paper (which never tested said amulet but simply inferred it might work based on Bility鈥檚 larger theory) is not the first time he has written about this topic. His makes available several manuscripts that were never published in journals but that were meant to elicit feedback. One of these early papers, the Holy Grail in physics that seeks to reconcile the invisible world of quantum mechanics with Einstein鈥檚 gravity. Given Bility鈥檚 academic credentials in molecular biology, I asked him where he had learned physics. 鈥淚 self-learn. There鈥檚 books, there鈥檚 papers. I took the time to read them. There鈥檚 no law in nature that says because you鈥檙e a biologist, you can鈥檛 read a physics book and try to understand it.鈥 He did not tell people about his readings, afraid he would be called crazy or told that it wasn鈥檛 his place to be an intellectual.

Bility tells me he wears a mask, practices social distancing and does not believe the germ theory of disease is completely wrong. But he has spotted anomalies that he thinks his wild hypothesis explains.

His theory around COVID can be summarized, to the best of my ability, as follows. Bility suggests that when the magnetic field of our planet weakens, the amount of water that is found on land masses (like lakes) increases and this leads to more iron oxide being made in certain rocks. These iron oxides have their own magnetic field which now interacts with the iron in our bodies more readily. This interaction affects a property of the electrons in our atoms, and this can allegedly cause DNA sequences in our own genomes to turn into fully functional viruses that make us sick. Are you still with me? Because in his recent work, Bility has fingered this hypothetical magnetic boogeyman as the culprit behind not just COVID-19, but Zika outbreaks, vaping-related lung illness, Ebola cases in Africa, a polio-like illness called acute flaccid myelitis, and even the opioid epidemic. And according to him, Stonehenge may have been a man-made magnetic field generator designed for public health.

As for the infamous jade-nephrite amulets of the sort worn by people over 5,500 years ago, they might interact with iron oxide鈥檚 magnetic fields and thus deflect them away from the body, he told me. I asked him if he was wearing an amulet. 鈥淩ight now, no. I鈥檝e chosen not to wear it because #1, what I do, I try to reduce my iron intake. Second, I don鈥檛 know how to pick the right amulet. I would have to go to someone who truly understands this.鈥

It鈥檚 fair to say that Bility鈥檚 big thesis has issues.

Rocking the boat to make sense of anomalies

Dr. Bility, in trying to single-handedly weave together an all-encompassing, multidisciplinary tapestry, makes a number of mistakes. His paper opens with the much-lambasted sentence, 鈥淭horacic organs, namely, the lungs and kidneys....鈥 Our kidneys are not in the thorax; they are located lower, in the abdomen. In fact, 鈥渢horacic kidney鈥 is. Jade is also, it鈥檚 not going to help in any way even if the rest of the theory were true. Bility also claims that the germ theory of disease dictates that, since people regularly fly all over the world, outbreaks of respiratory viruses should spread globally almost simultaneously. The fact that they don鈥檛 signals to him that there is something faulty with this much beloved theory. This is misguided, as the germ theory of disease makes no such prediction, but this kind of thinking can compel an anomaly hunter to declare himself the leader of a scientific revolution.

In my conversation with Bility, he name-dropped Kuhn. Thomas Kuhn was a philosopher of science best known for proposing that scientific research eventually hits too many snags which creates a crisis that is resolved by changing the dominant model in that discipline, a revolutionary process that became known as a 鈥減aradigm shift鈥: Darwin鈥檚 theory of evolution, Einstein鈥檚 relativity, big ideas that shake the foundations of a discipline. Dr. Naomi Oreskes, the Henry Charles Lea Professor of the History of Science at Harvard University, told me that you don鈥檛 get a paradigm shift just because you want it. 鈥淵ou get one when the scientific community deems it necessary, because the existing paradigm has confronted an anomaly that cannot be otherwise resolved despite multiple attempts.鈥 The germ theory of disease has limits, but neither of us are aware of any evidence that it has failed so badly, a crisis is on our doorstep and a new way of thinking must take its place. Science, as it turns out, tends not to move in giant, revolutionary steps but in small increments, like bricks being added to a wall. Kuhn himself would go on to disparage鈥

Moreover, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, but Bility does not see it that way. 鈥淭here is no such thing as that. What that statement is trying to say is that we should put up high barriers to anyone who wants to challenge the preexisting paradigm.鈥 Hence his go-to defence when his paper gets criticized online: people don鈥檛 expect a Black scientist such as himself to revolutionize a field. The fact that he is reviving an ancient folkloric way of thinking (i.e. amulets to ward off disease) also rubs people the wrong way, he claims. 鈥淚鈥檓 challenging some widely held beliefs in science: the belief that Indigenous people are inferior and that they do not make any rational decision.鈥 To invoke racism unprovoked, as he did during my conversation with him and, simply obscures the facts on the ground: there are lots of genuine problems with his paper that have nothing to do with race.

Should this paper even have been published?

Extraordinary claims require extraordinary peer review

I reached out to a number of academics to get their opinion on whether or not unorthodox ideas deserve to be published. Unanimously, the response was yes. 鈥淭he harm of being too narrow-minded,鈥 Dr. Oreskes told me, 鈥渋s likely in my mind to be greater than the harm of being overly inclusive.鈥 They also all agreed that if you鈥檙e going to make a bold claim that turns a well-established scientific theory on its head, you better bring your A game. 鈥淚f an idea contradicts commonly held views about the way the world works,鈥 the director of 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Biomedical Ethics Unit, Dr. Jonathan Kimmelman, wrote to me, 鈥渟tandards of evidence should be much more demanding.鈥 Basically, extraordinary claims do require extraordinary evidence, and be prepared to be criticized. 鈥淐laiming that a paper is 鈥榰northodox鈥 is not a license to misrepresent science in support of an unproven theory,鈥 said Timothy Caulfield, Canada Research Chair in Health Law and Policy at the University of Alberta. 鈥淧ublishing something that gets stuff wrong and misrepresents science can be a waste of resources and can confuse the academic literature. And, of course, it can be used to legitimize pseudoscience.鈥

Ultimately, a journal鈥檚 editor and the couple of scientists acting as peer reviewers are the gatekeepers of this process. 鈥淭his work was peer reviewed,鈥 Dr. Bility reminded me. 鈥淏elieve me, it took four months. Some reviewers were very tough. They made the paper better.鈥

Peer review is a faulty system. We have seen some howlers pass through peer review in the past, in part because reviewers don鈥檛 always take the time to go through the paper in detail. Peer review gets squeezed in between filing grant applications, supervising students, sitting on committees, and writing papers. Reviewers may also lack the expertise to identify mistakes. And when a paper reads like a cross-genre novel, featuring deep dives into the Earth鈥檚 magnetic field, ancient human cultures, and epidemiology, a multidisciplinary team of reviewers is needed to properly vet that paper. This is why comments from scientists after a paper is published can be so useful, and Bility鈥檚 paper has. Readers of the paper took issue with poor referencing, illogical jumps, and significant confusion over what doctors see in the lungs of many COVID patients. In short, the paper is a headache-inducing mess.

The bottom line is that academics should be free to throw radical ideas at the wall and see what sticks, but these bold assertions cannot simply be accepted in the name of open-mindedness. They need to be backed by extraordinary work, and peer review needs to be beefed up accordingly to prevent bad papers from ending up in the literature. As I鈥檓 revising this article before sending it in, I have just learned that. He plans to resubmit it as its sole author and to remove mentions of jade amulets and ancient Chinese medicine.

So if a friend of yours starts to wear a jade amulet to ward off the coronavirus and they tell you it鈥檚 backed by science, you鈥檒l know there鈥檚 no need to turn green with envy.

Take-home message:
-聽A now-retracted scientific paper tried to argue that magnetic field changes may be causing a number of diseases including COVID-19 and that wearing a jade amulet may offer protection, although there is no good reason to believe any of this
- Scientific articles that make bold claims should be submitted for publication, but they should also be deeply scrutinized and the evidence they present needs to be outstanding


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