The result was no consensus. NW ( Talk) 20:52, 27 August 2009 (UTC) reply
Appears to fail our WP:PEOPLE criteria for notability, the article mentions the subjects "lack of popularity and obscurity" and says he is not mentioned by other scientists. Dougweller ( talk) 09:34, 20 August 2009 (UTC) reply
In his retort to the sidebar of the 1999 Voss article in Science LaViolette lists the following articles:
He lists these in support of the following claims made in the same submission (the excerpt is from LaViolette's letter):
I was the first to disprove the expanding universe hypothesis by showing its inability to consistently fit cosmological test data (1). I was also the first to show that the jovian planets conform to the lower main sequence stellar mass-luminosity relation (2,3). My a priori prediction that brown dwarfs should also conform to this relation ha now been twice verified (2,4). I was also the originator of the subquantum kinetics microphyics methodology (2). In addition, I was the first to discover high levels of cosmic dust in polar ice (5). My published prediction that interstellar dust has been entering the solar system from the galactic center direction was later verified by Ulysses satellite data (6,7). I was the first to suggest that cosmic rays can relativistically propagate long distances through our galaxy along rectilinear trajectories (6,8), later validated by obesrvations of Cygnus X-3 and Hercules X-1. I was the first to predict that cosmic ray volleys repeatedly showered the Earth duing the last ice age (8), subsequently demonstrating with Be-10 data. I was the first to demonstrate the occurrence of a global warming event at the end of the last ice age (6,8,9). Also, in 1977, while serving as a consultant to the Club of Rome Goals for Mankind Project, I demonstrated that a photovoltaic power plant would be cheaper to build than a nuclear power plant (10).
— Valone, Thomas; Mallove, Eugene F.; LaViolette, Paul; Haaland, John E. (June 19, 1999). ""New Physics" Patents (letters)". Science. 284 (5422): 1929-1930.
__ meco ( talk) 13:46, 26 August 2009 (UTC) reply