Sunday, December 17, 2017

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Remember Enoch Opeyemi Who Claimed to have Solved the Riemann Hypothesis?

The age of alchemy is gone. Science has evolved in its exactness and predictability. Nigerians may embrace their Abalakas, the Opeyemis and the professor with the fastest super computer all they care, but when scientific claims are not subjected to scientific scrutiny and standards, we have the making of frauds, to keep it mild. 

Small wonder he was interviewed by a pastor. Nothing like faith to help us along the road of gullibility. 

There's science and there's science fiction, then there is fantasy and of course magical realism. 

On Dec 18, 2017 00:51, "'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series" <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Trial and error make up the process of scientific discovery. Do not confuse the fraud of a professor wannabe with the efforts of scholars to solve insoluble problems. Even if a mathematician fails to solve an ancient problem, it does not follow that the attempt was fradulent. Do you know how many light balls Edison tried before the thousands of researchers in his lab stumbled on the lasting filament? We should commend those who tried even if they invented nothing. Our problem is that not enough of us are formulating and testing hypotheses and not enough funding is available to support pure research.

Biko
--------------------------------------------
On Sat, 16/12/17, Farooq A. Kperogi <farooqkperogi@gmail.com> wrote:

 Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Remember Enoch Opeyemi Who Claimed to have Solved the Riemann Hypothesis?
 To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
 Date: Saturday, 16 December, 2017, 13:26

 Remember
 Enoch Opeyemi Who Claimed to have Solved the Riemann
 Hypothesis?

 By
 Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.Twitter:@farooqkperogi
 Two years ago, a certain Dr. Enoch
 Opeyemi who teaches mathematics at the Federal University in
 Oye-Ekiti suckered the Nigerian and British media into
 believing that he had solved the 156-year-old Riemann
 Hypothesis and would earn the $1 million prize for this
 "feat" from the US-based Clay Mathematics
 Institute.
 In my November 21, 2015 column titled, "'Mathematical'
 Enoch Opeyemi and the Making of Another Nigerian
 Intellectual 419er," I pointed out that Opeyemi's
 claims didn't stand up to scrutiny. "The moment I read
 about Dr. Enoch Opeyemi's claim to have solved the
 156-year-old Riemann Hypothesis in the Vanguard of November
 15, 2015, I didn't need to read a second opinion to know
 it was suspect at best and fraudulent at worst," I
 wrote.
 Certain credulous Nigerians attacked me
 for this. The more reasonable ones among them said since the
 Clay Mathematics Institute said it would reward any claim to
 have solved the hypothesis only if such a claim is published
 in a reputable mathematical journal and remains unchallenged
 in the mathematical scholarly community for two years, I
 should wait two years before pronouncing Opeyemi a
 delusional scammer.
 Well, I have waited two years. I checked
 the website of the Clay Mathematics Institute, and the
 Riemann Hypothesis that Opeyemi claimed to have solved two
 years ago is still listed as
 "unsolved." So, clearly, Opeyemi fooled the
 Nigerian and British media who in turn fooled the world.
 Some of us who saw through the chicanery and pointed it out
 were called cynical, negative, hypercritical, and even
 accused of being jealous of a high-achieving Nigerian
 scholar.
 When Opeyemi's claims invited a
 critical mass of scrutiny from sundry scholars and
 commentators, he chose to grant
 a TV interview to a popular Nigerian pastor by the name
 of Sunday Adelaja. During the interview, Opeyemi made even
 more ridiculous claims that, frankly, call his very sanity
 into question.
 A Yale University PhD student in
 mathematics, for instance, was particularly clinical in
 tearing Opeyemi's claims to shreds. In his attempt to
 undermine the Yale University PhD student during the TV
 interview, Opeyemi said PhD students don't publish in
 scholarly outlets until they have defended their doctoral
 dissertations, and that his challenger wasn't worthy of
 any attention.
 It takes unusual ignorance for a person
 who supposedly has a PhD to make that kind of outrageously
 fallacious claim. In many PhD programs in the US students
 are not allowed to graduate until they have published in
 well-regarded academic journals. This is especially true of
 the hard sciences.
 It also turned out that Opeyemi
 plagiarized a paper on the Riemann Hypothesis and uploaded
 it onto his academia.edu page. (It
 isn't clear if it was the plagiarized paper he presented
 as his "solution" to the Riemann Hypothesis). When
 Adelaja asked him about this, his defense was that the
 plagiarized paper on his academia.edu page was
 uploaded by someone who hacked into his account! But the
 plagiarized paper had been on his academia.edu
 page months before he attracted attention to himself through
 his false, ridiculous claims.
 I am dredging up this issue for two
 related reasons. One, we tend to be amnesic, and because
 we're amnesic we continually fall victim to the same cheap
 scam tactics. To rejig the memories of people who forgot
 about this issue, here is an abridged version of my
 November 21, 2015 column:
 Now, Opeyemi's only evidence for
 claiming to have solved the Riemann Hypothesis was that he
 presented a paper on the puzzle at the International
 Conference on Mathematics and Computer Science in Vienna,
 Austria.
 Well, it has turned out that the
 conference itself may be a borderline scam operation. An
 August 20, 2011 blog post titled "Fake Paper Accepted by
 Nina Ringo's Vienna Conference" revealed that a
 scientist by the name of Mohammad Homayoun who was
 suspicious of the genuineness of the International
 Conference on Mathematics and Computer Science (ICMC)
 decided to test his suspicion by submitting a fake,
 worthless, nonsensical paper to the conference to see if it
 would be accepted or rejected.
 The researcher's hunch was accurate:
 the ICMC in Vienna appears to be an elaborate, money-making
 scholarly scam. His paper was accepted even though it was
 intentionally nonsensical. "The conference claims that
 submissions/papers are reviewed/refereed BUT they are
 not," the researcher wrote. "A fake paper was submitted
 for evaluation to intercomp2011@gmail.com
 on Sun, Jan 2, 2011. The notification of acceptance was
 received on Sun, Jan 9, 2011." That's just one week of
 "peer review."
 But even if the conference were genuine,
 and it could very well be, you can't prove something as
 momentous as a 156-year-old mathematical problem with a mere
 conference presentation. In the rituals of knowledge
 production in academe, for any claim to be taken seriously,
 it has to be published in a well-regarded, peer-reviewed
 outlet, such as a journal. This is elementary
 knowledge…
  My sense is that Dr. Opeyemi genuinely
 fancies himself as having solved this mathematical puzzle,
 and his self-construal of his intellectual machismo got a
 boost when his paper got accepted for presentation at a
 conference in Vienna, Austria. In the now rampant xenophilic
 academic culture in Nigeria that uncritically valorizes the
 foreign, for one's paper to be accepted at an
 "international" (read: white) academic conference
 is seen as an endorsement of one's peerless scholarly
 prowess. 
 Never mind that many of these
 "international" conferences and journals are actually
 fraudulent.When naive xenophilia seamlessly
 commingles with the kind of mortifyingly cringe-worthy
 credulity that pervades the Nigerian media landscape AND the
 progressive dearth and death of basic fact-checking in even
 international media outlets like the BBC, you end up with
 embarrassing stories like this.
 This is not the first time this has
 happened. In July 2011, another Nigerian academic by the
 name of Michael Atovigba claimed to have solved the same
 Riemann Hypothesis. The ever so gullible Nigerian media
 believed and celebrated him. The reason Atovigba convinced
 himself that he had solved the mathematical puzzle that
 Opeyemi now also claims to have solved was that his paper
 (which has only seven references, four of which are from
 Wikipedia!) was found "worthy" of publication in an
 "international" journal, which turned out to be a
 notoriously worthless, predatory, bait-and-switch
 Pakistan-based journal that masquerades as a UK
 journal….
 Atovigba told the (Nigerian) Guardian
 that he would get his $1 million reward from the Clay
 Mathematics Institute now that he had published his
 "proof" in a "reputable international journal." Four
 years after, another deluded Nigerian "scientist" claims
 to have proved the same hypothesis for which Atovigba is
 still expecting his $1 million, and the media's legendary
 amnesia ensures that these clowns continue to expose Nigeria
 and Nigerians to international ridicule.
 Incredible!
 What is even more incredible is that a
 Nigerian BBC correspondent's story on Opeyemi, inspired by
 Vanguard's initial reporting (which was itself instigated
 by Opeyemi himself), has caused the British media to
 perpetrate Opeyemi's misrepresentation. Now, the British
 media's uncritical echoing of Opeyemi's initial lie is
 invoked as evidence to lend credibility to his claims to a
 non-existent feat. It has become one labyrinthine network of
 tortuous, self-reinforcing falsehoods. Only Philip
 Emeagwali's carefully packaged fraud outrivals
 this.  
 Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.Associate ProfessorJournalism & Emerging
 Media
 School of Communication & MediaSocial Science
 Building Room 5092 MD
 2207402 Bartow
 Avenue
 Kennesaw State University
 Kennesaw, Georgia, USA
 30144
 Cell: (+1) 404-573-9697
 Personal website: www.farooqkperogi.comTwitter: @farooqkperogAuthor of Glocal English: The Changing Face and Forms
 of Nigerian English in a Global World

 "The nice thing about pessimism
 is that you are constantly being either proven right or
 pleasantly surprised." G. F. Will





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