Of course with police, we have numerous documented examples of dishonest or unethical behavior. With paleontologists though? Not so much.
Of course not.
Of course not, but what's interesting about that is how scientists go out of their way to implement a system specifically designed to minimize bias. It's not perfect, but it's certainly better than nothing and as a scientist, I can say with absolute certainty that in my work we check each other for bias all the time.
LOL....no, that would be a weird thing to believe.
In general, sure. People can believe whatever they like.
LOL....at least you
have hair to pull out!
In my experience, when one of us identifies bias in a colleague's work, I've never seen anyone accuse them of being dishonest. It's usually more along the lines of them not realizing their own bias, which is why showing your work to your colleagues is vital to the process.
It comes down to one main thing....education and public policy. If evolution deniers merely had their beliefs and left it at that, most scientists wouldn't care about them any more than we care about people who deny a spherical earth. I don't know where you live, but in the US there is a long history of creationists attempting to undermine science education, especially when it comes to evolution. As some of the papers we've been discussing show, understanding the evolutionary history of life on earth is vital to a number of specific avenues of research, such as bioinformatics. Figuring out what genetic sequences do and how they vary across people is important to medical treatments, and is very much based on evolutionary common ancestry. So the more we know and understand about our evolutionary history, the more likely we are to make important scientific advances.
So when we see people actively trying to undermine all that, we take both interest and action.