I'm glad SD just posted that last clarifying reply above.
All that seems to have happened is a few crossed wires, and maybe some unfortunate emotive language to express one's opinion and then some defensive action:
OP posted "what's everyone think of this blog with some home HB trials?".
For better or worse, the trials are presented in a quasi-scientific manner and in spite of prominent disclaimers, are kinda discussed as semi-scientific results. Furthermore, the OP seems to be interpreting the blog as a set of scientific results, though done on a less-than-perfect home setting.
Basically it makes for some interesting reading and maybe even a few tips/"improvements" but most people, especially the experienced brewers, can also point to significant flaws in the methodology and the error of reading too much into the results. The brewers on here with an actual science/research background have taken the time to clarify that the blog is definitely in no way proper science ("proper" referring to reproducible, rigorous methodology, not an authoritarian conspiracy), and should not be mistaken for what is actual science & scientific results as per published in peer-review journals. Most people on here seem to have already understood that (and had mentioned it in their posts), but i think it's valuable to have that clarification in black and white - people of a non-research background sometimes see little difference between well written blogs and a peer-review research journal.
The input of everyone in these discussions is valuable, but especially so the detailed responses/explanations from the more highly experienced brewers and those with a deeper science understanding of (home) brewing. It helps make AHB a foundation of knowledge, rather than just internet opinion.
FWIW, as someone with a science background, i can appreciate that people who are in the science industry, namely the researchers, get a little exasperated with most other people apparently blurring between rigorous reproducible peer-reviewed scientific research & experimentation, and everything else which can sometimes be little more than anecdotal opinion. That's not to say any basic opinion must therefore be wrong, it's just that it's only an opinion until more rigorously demonstrated. Or just an interesting result in an home brewery, etc. Sometimes important knowledge/science can start off in such a setting, but it's not really reliable or credible until its been shown to be reproducible in a rigorous process.
Apologies for the long post, but reading this thread was starting to feel like a train wreck in slow motion, even though i think it was a valuable discussion topic to initiate.
EDIT: i should add i really like the kind of stuff Brulosopher is doing; but yeah, i'd take it with a massive grain of salt. Some great nuggets in there and i like to see boundaries tested; but there's a few seriously loose bits of process in there and i'm a little worried that anyone who wasn't mindful enough to pick up on those might come away with a some poor ideas.