LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
I am not advocating for Braidwood at all, I am strictly neutral.
I'm sorry, what??? Did you write that with a straight face?
He adopted the null hypothesis and sent them to three independent laboratories which rejected the null hypothesis that there had not been an intense detonation within the vicinity of the metal pieces he submitted.
Given the characteristic twinning that was recognised by these laboratories you cannot rule out detonation/s. The BAM institute in Germany did present an alternative theory based on shot blasting, albeit they used their own piece of metal to find out other ways to recreate a similar effect.
You're employing the term "null hypothesis", when it's clear that a) you truly don't know what that term actually means, because b) it's not applicable wrt the example you're describing here (FYI though, the null hypothesis is only ever applicable to statistical tests of a logical condition)