Of note too is that Wallace was particularly poor at the time of the initial wager and took it on not to prove the earth round, but instead to pad his pocket books since his Evolutionist work was apparently not paying the bills.
This is a repetition of something Tom Bishop brought up many times in this thread. Although, you brought it up in a much better fashion. However, since no one can prove that money clouded his or misguided his work in any way, it is not relevant as more than a side note.
Thanks for filling me in a bit.
I suppose; A similar argument could be made for the flip side - since we cannot prove the money did not introduce confirmation bias its fair to assume it did, especially given his supposed financial state, the ease of replication, and the further already completed replications. No man can act without knowledge he has; he was aware of the bet.
This is of course ignoring that science is by large a crooked affair of fudging numbers, lying, cheating, stealing, fraud, libel, and the like. I think its fair to assume its possible he would have done anything (like any scientist before him) to advance science in any way he could, prove wrong his bitter rival, and gain a tidy sum.
Take a few of the champions of RE: Einstein, Copernicus, Newton have been caught in Academic fraud or similar misdeeds. Einstein was notorious for ignoring results that conflicted with relativity and was blatantly caught in one instance. Copernicus' model was patently wrong and theres no way he didn't know it, unless of course he couldn't see two tide shifts in one day (common knowledge at the time). Newton was notoriously an awful person driven to madness who would often forge results, steal work, and actively work to deny others credit for their work.
Since WWII science got a whitewash to make it appear trustworthy and not, you know, Nazi Science. One can even see it now when one looks to drivel like the TV show "The Big Bang Theory." The main recurrent theme of science is not truth, but instead "my best guess of truth - by any means." Its far more natural and cutthroat than it should be in optimal conditions. Which is fine - it works. It could work better but that's not the issue. And it still goes on, just not in plain sight. A recent survey (which had 51% of its copies returned) showed past (within 3 months) academic dishonesty positive at approximately 1/3 of the studied. 1/3rd in 3 monthes.
Perhaps the issue is partly the overuse of specialism creates the conditions that led to the need of empiricism in the first place - a common need for the movement of power of knowledge from a select elite to the common whole. This is the importance of zeteticism - The People deserve Truth and Honesty in the science they, by and large one way or the other, pay for in labor. A plutocracy, whether it is wealth of money or knowledge, always leads to a ruling class without a sense of the ruleds classes morality - or even in this case a lack of care due to what one can assume is a higher goal, ironically to help the human race.
Very little separates the attitudes and actions of science today (and always) and those who in the past would use their knowledge to power. In short, I'd sooner trust most criminals than a scientist in matters of truth, especially if a grant or vendetta is involved. The side to err on here is caution.
So, in the end, its a wash - one should look to newer replications of this experiment. Hopefully we can hear on Daniels data and we can also look to past similar attempts in other localities.