Sunday 17 December 2017

The Pale Ale Fallacy

Identity VerifiedThinker in Science / Social Sciences / Sociology
Mike Sutton
Mike Sutton
Dr Mike Sutton is the author of 'Nullius in Verba: Darwin's greatest secret'.

 
Posted in Science / Social Sciences / Sociology

Sutton's Mythbusting Protest. Wikipedia Myth Number 18. The Pale Ale Fallacy

Nov. 17, 2013 3:07 pm
Categories: CounterknowledgeDysology
Here on Best Thinking, everyday throughout November, I am publishing a newly busted myth, or newly discovered fallacy, which is currently being disseminated by the on-line encyclopedia known as Wikipedia.
I am highlighting Wikipedia’s unreliability and dreadful quality of information in protest against its deliberate policy of facilitating and refusing to halt engaging in stealth plagiarism of information from the unique work of expert authors.
At the time of writing, Wikipedia’s senior editors refuse to cite Best Thinking as a reliable source, yet Wikipedia regularly plagiarizes the original content on this site to pass-off my unique myth busting discoveries as though they are discoveries made by its own replicators who refer to themselves collectively as ‘Wikipedians’. Wikipedia passively sanctions this self-serving fraudulent behavior in order to conceal its unreliability and pervasive myth-mongering. (Click here: for the full story).

Myth as brewed up on Wikipedia on 17th November 2013   

‘Pale ale was a term used for beers made from malt dried with coke…and in around 1703 the term pale ale was first used…’
Postscript update
Wikipedia moved the myth to special Pale Ale page Wikipedia 17th December 2017   
'The highest proportion of pale malts results in a lighter color.[   The term "pale ale" first appeared around 1703 for beers made from malts dried with coke which resulted in a lighter color than other beers popular at that time. Different brewing practices and hop levels have resulted in a range of taste and strength within the pale ale family.'
Fact
Unsurprisingly, since almost all its pages disseminate utter claptrap, Wikipedia is wrong again! This time the inexpert encyclopedia that is not fit for purpose is out by 28 years.Because, with the greatest of irony, the term actually appears in an etymological dictionary 28 years earlier than those sober minded yet slip-shod Wikipedians believe it was first used.
'SLAPE ALE, pale Ale as opposed to Ale medicated with Wormwood or Scurvy-Grass or any other Liquor.'

How to reference this discovery

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