Rincewind
Philosopher
Whatever else Jabba has been doing, I admit to a LOL moment with "a real live, dead body".
So - thanks Jabba!
So - thanks Jabba!
-- but then, I also have only circumstantial evidence that the shroud is an imprint of a real live dead body...
Nonsense. We understand you perfectly. We DO NOT AGREE WITH YOU. There is a difference.Jabba said:- Nobody understands me!
Than you have nothing.- I don't have any "direct" evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old...
This isn't circumstantial evidence. This is nothing. Dead bodies were not uncommon in the Middle Ages, as has been pointed out to you. Therefore whether it's an imprint of a dead body or not cannot, in any way, tell us anything about the age of the shroud. There is no logical connection between your evidence and your conclusion.- I have only "circumstantial" evidence.
- And ... much of my circumstantial evidence is "circumstantial squared." E.g., that the shroud is an imprint of a real live, dead body is part of the circumstantial evidence leading to my verdict that the shroud is 2000 years old -- but then, I also have only circumstantial evidence that the shroud is an imprint of a real live dead body...
Hugh,
- Nobody understands me!
- Try this.
- I don't have any "direct" evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old...
- I have only "circumstantial" evidence.
- And ... much of my circumstantial evidence is "circumstantial squared." E.g., that the shroud is an imprint of a real live, dead body is part of the circumstantial evidence leading to my verdict that the shroud is 2000 years old -- but then, I also have only circumstantial evidence that the shroud is an imprint of a real live dead body...
- If that passes muster with you, I'll go on and try to further explain what I'm trying to do here.
I don't think I understand: exactly what you are trying to say?Hugh,
- Nobody understands me!
- Try this.
- I don't have any "direct" evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old...
- I have only "circumstantial" evidence.
- And ... much of my circumstantial evidence is "circumstantial squared." E.g., that the shroud is an imprint of a real live, dead body is part of the circumstantial evidence leading to my verdict that the shroud is 2000 years old -- but then, I also have only circumstantial evidence that the shroud is an imprint of a real live dead body...
- If that passes muster with you, I'll go on and try to further explain what I'm trying to do here.
Hugh,
- Nobody understands me!
- Try this.
- I don't have any "direct" evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old...
- I have only "circumstantial" evidence.
- And ... much of my circumstantial evidence is "circumstantial squared." E.g., that the shroud is an imprint of a real live, dead body is part of the circumstantial evidence leading to my verdict that the shroud is 2000 years old -- but then, I also have only circumstantial evidence that the shroud is an imprint of a real live dead body...
- If that passes muster with you, I'll go on and try to further explain what I'm trying to do here.
I realize that you're ignoring everyone else besides Hugh. I also realize that it has never once entered your mind that you are wrong, but now might be a good time to consider it.
1. I really don't know if Jabba has most everyone else on "official" ignore status or not- I suspect it is sort-of a subjective ignore status: he sees the post but doesn't bother to answer it (or perhaps even to read it). Time is precious you know.
2. Jabba has stated that he needs the Shroud to be real to help confirm his own faith in Christianity, so in a sense he does worry that he might be wrong. Yet somehow that appears to translate to a need to convince others that the Shroud is authentic. So I think that Jabba has thought that he might be wrong, but can't accept that thought and is seeking the affirmation of others to overcome his own doubts. "Psychiatrical consultation: 5 cents."
The media coverage of the shroud "veneration" over the weekend was disappointing. Almost every story mentioned that scientists "have no idea" or "disagree" as to how the image got on the shroud. As if that matters.
- I don't have any "direct" evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old...
- I have only "circumstantial" evidence.
In Jabba-speak: The live, dead doctor is in,out.The doctor is real in!
In Jabba-speak: The live, dead doctor is in,out.![]()
I for one and most other people here understand you. You're just wrong. The cloth on which the image is imprinted must be 2000ish years old for it to be what you want it to be. The cloth has to be older than the image. The cloth carbon dated to the 13th century. By fiat you decided you should dismiss that date but your objections don't amount to anything. Without dating the cloth there's nothing.Hugh,
- Nobody understands me!
- Try this.
- I don't have any "direct" evidence that the shroud is 2000 years old...
- I have only "circumstantial" evidence.
- And ... much of my circumstantial evidence is "circumstantial squared." E.g., that the shroud is an imprint of a real live, dead body is part of the circumstantial evidence leading to my verdict that the shroud is 2000 years old -- but then, I also have only circumstantial evidence that the shroud is an imprint of a real live dead body...
- If that passes muster with you, I'll go on and try to further explain what I'm trying to do here.
By fiat you decided you should dismiss that date but your objections don't amount to anything.
It's worse than that. He's declared that if the dating is wrong, this supports it being 2000 years old. The dating could be wrong by a thousand years and the shroud still wouldn't be old enough to be genuine. He doesn't seem to understand that, even if the C dating is wrong, there are a couple hundred million possibilities other than this being the burial cloth of Jesus that are just as if not far more likely.
2. Jabba has stated that he needs the Shroud to be real to help confirm his own faith in Christianity, so in a sense he does worry that he might be wrong. Yet somehow that appears to translate to a need to convince others that the Shroud is authentic. So I think that Jabba has thought that he might be wrong, but can't accept that thought and is seeking the affirmation of others to overcome his own doubts. "Psychiatrical consultation: 5 cents."
That reads like a story in The Daily Mash, Peter.
I'd never seen that one before, thanks.