The Piltdown Man Hoax: Uncovering a Scientific Scandal

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In summary, the Piltdown Hoax was a famous scandal in the scientific community that revealed the danger of preconceived notions and scientific biases. It was a hoax played on the scientific community and initially accepted due to nationalistic pride and the belief in directed evolution. However, when the hoax was discovered, it was dropped from the mainstream, showing the error-correcting nature of good science. The Cardiff Giant, another famous hoax involving a petrified man, was also revealed to be fake after a lawsuit between P.T. Barnum and one of the perpetrators.
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Ivan Seeking
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The Piltdown Hoax
Possibly one of the most famous scandals in all of science, the Piltdown Hoax illustrates the dangerous effects a preconceived notion of what "should" be true can have on the scientific pursuit of the truth.

By the early twentieth century, Darwin's theory of inheritance of favored traits via competition and natural selection had been accepted by the scientific mainstream. Differing from how we view evolution today, the scientific thought of the time was of "directed evolution", or evolution leading to perfection of form. Under this ideology, organisms evolved, toward the perfect natural form (which, incidentally, was human). Many scientists and thinkers of the day took this notion a step further, proposing that man, too, had evolved through various stages toward a perfect human form, which just so happened to be western European (see our FAQ on the concept of race in paleoanthropology).

As such, it was thought that in this quest for perfection, early human ancestors would have evolved their large brains first to separate humanity from brute animals, and this would allow the cognition necessary for all other advances to take place. There is nothing wrong with this (the part about large brains developing first, that is). In the absence of evidence, this is a hypothesis that can be checked for truth by comparing it to evidence found later.

The scandal[continued]
http://www.mnh.si.edu/anthro/humanorigins/ha/pilt.html
 
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  • #2
Cardiff Giant

In 1869, New York cigar maker George Hull had a block of gypsum carved in the likeness of a man over 10 feet tall. It was artificially aged, buried on the Cardiff, N.Y., farm of Hull's confederate, William Newell, and then arranged to be "discovered" by workmen. Its discovery was heralded as a great geological find of a huge petrified man, and proof of the Genesis verse: "There were giants on the Earth in those days…" People flocked to see the giant for a mere 25 cent admission charge. P. T. Barnum wanted to buy the giant and when Hull refused, Barnum had a copy made and declared Hull's to be phony. Hull finally confessed his fraud and Barnum's fake of a fake ultimately drew more people than the original. The Cardiff Giant can be visited today in Cooperstown, N.Y., while Barnum's fake is in Farmington Hills, Mich.

Footnote: This was the incident that inspired "There's a sucker born every minute" but P. T. Barnum didn't say it. One of Hull's partners, David Hannum did—and Barnum appropriated it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiff_Giant

Hannum sued Barnum and it was revealed that both giants were fake on February 2, 1870. The judge ruled that Barnum could not be sued for calling a fake giant a fake.
 
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  • #3
Some notes...
(1) Piltdown was a hoax played on the scientific community (not by the scientific community).
(2) The specimen, although initially accepted by English scientists, was not readily accepted by scientists in other countries. Nationalistic pride was part of the reason for the rapid acceptance. But science goes beyond a country's borders.
(3) When the hoax was discovered, the Piltdown specimen was dropped from the mainstream. Good science is error-correcting.
 
  • #4
The thing that's always interested me more than the Piltdown hoax itself is the investigation into who actually perpetrated the hoax.
 

Related to The Piltdown Man Hoax: Uncovering a Scientific Scandal

1. What was the Piltdown Man hoax?

The Piltdown Man hoax was a scientific scandal in which a set of fossilized skull and jaw fragments were presented as the "missing link" in human evolution. The fossils were supposedly discovered in Piltdown, England in 1912, but were later revealed to be a forgery.

2. Who was responsible for the Piltdown Man hoax?

The hoax was orchestrated by Charles Dawson, a lawyer and amateur archaeologist, and Arthur Smith Woodward, a paleontologist at the British Museum. It is believed that Dawson created the fake fossils and planted them at the site, while Woodward was responsible for verifying their authenticity and promoting them as a significant discovery.

3. How was the Piltdown Man hoax uncovered?

In the 1950s, new dating techniques revealed that the Piltdown fossils were significantly younger than initially believed, casting doubt on their authenticity. In 1953, a team of scientists led by Kenneth Oakley conducted a series of tests on the fossils and determined that the skull was actually that of a medieval human and the jaw was that of an orangutan. This exposed the hoax and the Piltdown Man was officially declared a forgery.

4. What was the impact of the Piltdown Man hoax on the scientific community?

The Piltdown Man hoax was a major embarrassment for the scientific community, particularly for the experts who had initially verified the authenticity of the fossils. It also caused significant controversy and debate within the scientific community over the validity of other similar discoveries and the methods used to verify them.

5. Why did Charles Dawson and Arthur Smith Woodward perpetrate the Piltdown Man hoax?

The exact motivations behind the Piltdown Man hoax are still unclear, but it is believed that Dawson and Woodward wanted to gain recognition and prestige in the scientific community. They may have also been influenced by the prevailing ideas and biases of the time, as the discovery of a "missing link" was highly sought after and would have fit with the dominant narrative of human evolution.

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