cntdrv55
Thinker
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2010
- Messages
- 158
...and wondered if I had missed a post where he actually used numbers and possibly combined them to form equations then drew conclusions...
...and wondered if I had missed a post where he actually used numbers and possibly combined them to form equations then drew conclusions...
Careful! Tony sometimes (not in this thread, but there is precedent elsewhere) indeed uses numbers and combines them to form equations then draws conclusions - but having failed to use technical arguments and rational thinking to come up with a reasonable, realistic model to apply those equations to, he produces GIGO.
d'you mean like sort of an anti-explosive which sucks rather than blows?
Careful! Tony sometimes (not in this thread, but there is precedent elsewhere) indeed uses numbers and combines them to form equations then draws conclusions - but having failed to use technical arguments and rational thinking to come up with a reasonable, realistic model to apply those equations to, he produces GIGO.
You are talking trash here. You have no basis for saying my equations produce GIGO.
You are talking trash here. You have no basis for saying my equations produce GIGO.
Actually its one of the things TSz gets right, and wrong at the same time. He makes the assumption that the official scenario is that the towers failed by Progressive Column Failure. That's incorrect.Don't sell yourself short, Tony. Your Journal of Protective Structures paper is practically a genre defining piece of GIGO. You make an observation about the collapse dynamics, assume a structural resistance that disagrees with that observation, demonstrate that your assumption doesn't describe the subsequent collapse dynamics, and conclude that the collapse must have involved something that invalidated your assumption, which you very coyly pretend isn't an argument in favour of CD because that might have made the reviewers look a little harder at your reasoning. It's a breathtaking achievement to come up with an argument that manages to be circular and self-contradictory at the same time, but somehow you pulled it off.
Dave
Cue: Stage set for personal attacks based on "not an engineer" and "anonymous poster". AND ignoring the real situation "You are right Oystein" - anonymous non-engineer notwithstanding.Careful! Tony sometimes (not in this thread, but there is precedent elsewhere) indeed uses numbers and combines them to form equations then draws conclusions - but having failed to use technical arguments and rational thinking to come up with a reasonable, realistic model to apply those equations to, he produces GIGO.
You are talking trash here. You have no basis for saying my equations produce GIGO.
THEN don’t overlook the bits the paper got right. The consequences are even funnier.Don't sell yourself short, Tony. Your Journal of Protective Structures paper is practically a genre defining piece of GIGO. You make an observation about the collapse dynamics, assume a structural resistance that disagrees with that observation, demonstrate that your assumption doesn't describe the subsequent collapse dynamics, and conclude that the collapse must have involved something that invalidated your assumption, which you very coyly pretend isn't an argument in favour of CD because that might have made the reviewers look a little harder at your reasoning. It's a breathtaking achievement to come up with an argument that manages to be circular and self-contradictory at the same time, but somehow you pulled it off.You are talking trash here. You have no basis for saying my equations produce GIGO.
Dave
Using complicated looking maths build on false foundations has remained Tony's preferred SOP.me 13 Nov 2007 said:The supporters of 9/11 conspiracies build on the same foundation as the creationists - poor logic, worse science together with distortions, lies and deliberate deceptions.
The paper referenced as Engineering Reality by Tony Szamboti is typical of many which look impressive in detail to the non-engineer. The complex calculations may even be correct but the base premises are faulty and the resulting conclusions can readily be demonstrated to be totally wrong.
Take care with the "double negative" construction of the paper. Or was it triple negative - I'd have to re-read it.Actually its one of the things TSz gets right, and wrong at the same time. He makes the assumption that the official scenario is that the towers failed by Progressive Column Failure. That's incorrect.
He knows that the most likely scenario is that of massive overload of floors, trusses/beams, and connections to the columns.
OTOH he makes a good case that the towers did not fail due primarily to column failure. Something many of us agree with, and have not argued for.
Not quite Nist never tested the effect of the
Giant smoke plume.
http://dustexplosions.blogspot.com/2012/11/the-csb-investigating-printing-ink.html?m=1
Careful! Tony sometimes (not in this thread, but there is precedent elsewhere) indeed uses numbers and combines them to form equations then draws conclusions - but having failed to use technical arguments and rational thinking to come up with a reasonable, realistic model to apply those equations to, he produces GIGO.
How is it you're familiar with this concept, yet when it comes to the official theory, you have no problem accepting the results? And to be clear, it's not garbage in. The official theory, any way you cut it, cannot explain steel failures.
Ideally, it works like this:
Good data in---> valid theory ---> sound conclusion that we have confidence in.
But in this case, we have good data, but not a valid theory. That is, even if you put in good data, there's no guarantee that it will produce a sound conclusion. In fact, the only way you get a sound conclusion from an invalid theory is by accident.
Good data in---> invalid theory ---> no guarantee of soundness
This is where we are with the NIST explanation. This is the epistemic stance by which the entire apologist movement pivots, yet you cannot get yourself to admit the theory can't produce sound conclusions because it's not valid.
In fact, it's contradicted by its own data. We can pretty much guarantee that any conclusions drawn from it are wrong. You see this, right?
.
Another non-technical post to a technical discussion.
Another non-technical argument offered against my technical argument. This is getting pathetic.
The obvious reality is that you can't answer my argument.
Do you have a technical background?
You clearly are not a technical person and have no place in the argument as you apparently can't understand it.
* = Official narrative being the 9/11 Commission Report, the 2002 Joint Congressional Investigation Report, the F.B.I.'s investigation, NIST's reports, etc etc other government sponsored reports and/or investigations as well the statements of government workers and the leadership.
So, in your opinion, is there a legitimate reason to question the official narrative?
1. Yes
2. No
3. Undecided
Still having trouble with telling the difference between baseline testing and reality?But they did test the effects of heat. And they turned out to be negligible
nient, was an unprecedented event at this scale.
Still having trouble with telling the difference between baseline testing and reality?
Unfortunately, 99.9% of Structural Engineers will disagree with you.
Fortunately, the amount of people who think 1+1=3 does not change the answer to it.
Fortunately, the amount of people who think 1+1=3 does not change the answer to it.
Fortunately, the amount of people who think 1+1=3 does not change the answer to it.
For 911 truth followers it does, in the fertile minds of CTers committed to the lies of 911 truth.Fortunately, the amount of people who think 1+1=3 does not change the answer to it.