Belkheiri, Nadji (2026) The Impossible Fertilizer: An Epistemological Defense of Scientific Heresy and the Case of Piotr Gariaev A Critical Meditation on the Value of Ideas That Cannot Be True, and Why We Must Engage Them Anyway. [Preprint]
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Abstract
This essay undertakes a sustained philosophical examination of the wave genome hypothesis of Piotr Gariaev, treating it not as a scientific theory for it is not one but as an epistemological object: an idea whose empirical content is effectively null, yet whose structure, persistence, and reception illuminate the boundaries, commitments, and unarticulated assumptions of mainstream molecular biology. The argument proceeds in four movements. First, I construct the strongest possible case for the physical untenability of the hypothesis, grounding the indictment in quantum decoherence theory (Gilmore & McKenzie, 2005; Zurek, 2003), the Landauer principle (Landauer, 1961; Bérut et al., 2012), Shannon information theory (Shannon, 1948), and the absence of any known mechanism for field to sequence transduction. I argue that the hypothesis would require the coordinated revision of multiple independently confirmed theoretical frameworks, a state I term practically incompatible with established physics a category distinct from contingent or paradigmatic impossibility. Second, I refine this notion and propose a tripartite taxonomy of scientific impossibility. Third, I develop a theory of the epistemological object, specifying criteria for its identification and an asymmetric engagement protocol for its responsible study. Fourth, I situate Gariaev’s work within a broader history of productive error, carefully distinguishing his case from earlier episodes and noting that even historically revolutionary errors did not demand the coordinated revision of multiple independently established physical frameworks. A dialogic interlude engages seriously with the intellectual motivations that may draw thoughtful people toward wave genetic ideas, while acknowledging the plurality of adherents’ motivations. The essay concludes with a reflection on the ethical norms that should govern the philosophical engagement with impossible ideas. At no point does the argument soften the scientific verdict: the wave genome hypothesis is empirically empty and physically untenable. Its value lies not in its content but in its capacity to function as a mirror, forcing us to articulate what we know, how we know it, and where the limits of our knowledge lie.
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| Item Type: | Preprint | ||||||
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| Keywords: | wave genome, Gariaev, decoherence, Landauer principle, scientific impossibility, epistemological object, fringe science, demarcation, philosophy of biology | ||||||
| Subjects: | Specific Sciences > Biology Specific Sciences > Historical Sciences General Issues > Philosophers of Science General Issues > Social Epistemology of Science |
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| Depositing User: | Dr. Nadji Belkheiri | ||||||
| Date Deposited: | 11 May 2026 12:38 | ||||||
| Last Modified: | 11 May 2026 12:38 | ||||||
| Item ID: | 29544 | ||||||
| DOI or Unique Handle: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20084631 | ||||||
| Subjects: | Specific Sciences > Biology Specific Sciences > Historical Sciences General Issues > Philosophers of Science General Issues > Social Epistemology of Science |
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| Date: | 8 May 2026 | ||||||
| URI: | https://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/id/eprint/29544 |
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