Wait, wait, wait, wait, so if you claim something, tell people the EXACT way you did it, others try (which is what peer review is about) and nobobdy replicates the result, you consider that a fallacy with peer review? It's like saying you did an experiment and 2+2 ended up being 5 and when everyone else does it, they get 4. If that were to happen to me, I'd try to replicate the results again.
There's a difference between authority and expertise. Religion is about authority. Science is about expertise. If I'm reading your angle correctly, you'd be fine with ANYBODY publishing a supposed cure for cancer because they used the scientific method and got a result that can test for cancer that no one else can duplicate.
You must be a REAL friend to the snake oil salesmen out there.
If religion were about "authority", Jesus didn't get the memo. Neither did Confucious, or Buddha. According to these folks, "religion" is about personal accountability, personal virtue, and personal truth. According to their teachings, there is an enlightened path for a good or better life that is so far above the commonplace paths of mankind it is remarkable if a human can come close to the better way.
The medieval clerics of Catholicism needed ignorant folks who didn't know the teachings of Jesus, and the cloak of state sanction as well as the swords and axes of state police to enforce that ignorance. They killed people who would read the bible, calling them "apostate" or "heretics", the same way statists today need to marginalize people with personal values who try to live better moral lives rather than be mere pawns dependent upon authority.
yah I know that a lot of "evolutionists" want the State to enforce their doctrine in public schools.
So much so, sometimes they will just misrepresent what someone like me says to cram me into some little corner of the discussion, throwing out some dismissive allegations that are just false.
I said "Peer Review" isn't part of the scientific method as it was defined a few decades ago. And that's the fact. It is not publication in a "Peer-Reviewed" journal that makes a result valid, it is actual validity. And in "Science" there is no person or authority that can make a result valid. You and many others today mistake state sanction for validity. That is exactly the same thing that clerics and lot of ignorant folks did when medieval states sanctioned religious doctrine and enforced religious beliefs or norms of society with austere punishments including capital punishment.
If I read a scientific report, I will do my own thinking. Maybe I will see something wrong with the idea. Maybe I'll think it is unsettling to my convictions. Maybe I'll want to see what others find out in their efforts to check the report. Before anything becomes accepted, it is---was---- commonplace for a lot of critics to rush to their labs and try to prove it wrong somehow, even after it was published in Science or JAMA, or whatever other peer-reviewed journal.