ThiChi,
I'm trying to have a civil discussion here, but you are making that very difficult.
I'm not an Evolution Fundamentalist. I don't have any emotional investment in the theory. If it's right it's right, if it's wrong it's wrong. I am only against distortion of facts and shoddy research. If you want to accuse me of being a "Scientific Method Fundamentalist", then so be it. I take that as a compliment, though I am not closed to the notion of other methods of gaining knowledge being advantageous so long as they are proven to work. So far, the scientific method is the only one that works and is self correcting.
True religious fundamentalists, on the other hand, do have a high emotional stake in their world view. There is no objectivity and there is a clear propensity for them to twist and misinterpret facts to protect that world view. There is ample evidence of this on any Creationist web site and they are never corrected. You have not been able to document one time this has happened without being corrected by the scientific method on the Evolution side. Fraud is detestable to scientists, but it seems to be the modus operandi of religious fundamentalists when it comes to science.
Also, even though I question Cremo's objectivity, I have actually looked into his claims and found them lacking. They were not lacking because of his fundamentalist views, but because his data is bad. Knowing a person is a fundamentalist is just a red flag so you are alert that the person is not necessarily objective and so you are sure to scrutinize their claims - just as you should any claim. In practice, though, it's difficult to scrutinize every single claim, so the rule of thumb, "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence" is used. Fundamentalists usually make extraordinary claims, but they never seem to have the evidence to back them.
Also, my point about a book review not being a peer review is quite clear. Think about it. People who write book reviews are usually just giving a surface critique. They are not methodically looking through all of the supporting data. On the surface the book seems to be well written and makes sense, but if the conclusions are based on bad data, then it is of no value. Unfortunately, the people who reviewed the book did not look at the data. They took Cremo's word for it. Therefore, it is silly to stand on book reviews to show that a view has merit - unless the reviewer has spent much time looking at the supporting data. As has been shown before, when a reviewer did look at the supporting data, the review was less than flattering.
rem