The paper was listed as such simply because the journal had never published a historical case study before and the subject did not fit with any of its regular medical categories.
Really? That's a bit remiss of it.
Are they accepting historical interpretations of blood diseases as a general policy these days, or how did you manage to get them to go out on a limb for you?
Thanks for the vote of confidence.
No matter who did the research, it still stands on record as a medically accepted alternative interpretation of the historical facts in evidence that has passed the litmus test of a full and proper medical peer-review by a recognized panel of expert haematologists and professors before being approved for publication in an accredited medical journal that specializes in haematology.
An alternative interpretation of a historical case is a different matter from original new scientific research, which is what I thought you were claiming in post 80. Since, as you said, this sort of historical interpretation is something rather new for this journal, it isn't surprising that it didn't generate much in the way of response.
BTW, I don't know about the policy of this particular journal, but most journals don't let the authors know who did the peer review. Are you really certain they didn't just send it out to a couple of medical historians?
The only thing that can now disprove that same alternative interpretation of the evidence is if the investigating scientists who are now claiming to have identified Alexei actually do manage to find the necessary scientific proof of that long-suspected faulty Factor VIII gene.
Then by the same token, the only thing that can disprove the standard interpretation is if someone who claims to have identified Alexei can show that there's no genetic evidence of haemophilia while still standing by the identification of the remains as Alexei, and that claim has priority over your claim.
Apparently, that's now not going to happen... in which case... the medically accepted and peer-reviewed argument against the claim of haemophilia in the Russian Imperial family will continue to stand as a properly recognized and medically sound alternative interpretation of the facts.
The claim of haemophilia will also stand as the recognised interpretation that's also supported by the medical evidence. Scientifically, the earlier interpretations are the ones that matter unless the challenges have been confirmed. Your challenge has not been confirmed.
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