Disbelief
Illuminator
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2007
- Messages
- 3,606
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Her conclusions.
So where does she say detonation? Everything she talks about can be attributed to welding.
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Her conclusions.
No.
No, pointing out that someone is using a common, distractive rhetorical strategy is not at all the same as calling that person names.
So where does she say detonation? Everything she talks about can be attributed to welding.
Every time we focus on random misstatements, oddities and one-off nonsense claims, we end up ignoring the real substantive claims.
The slides actually say "no sign of contact deformation" in two places that I see.
ETA: but to be honest I'm just googling to figure out what that means. I saw "contact detonation" at first glance.
The slides actually say "no sign of contact deformation" in two places that I see.
ETA: but to be honest I'm just googling to figure out what that means. I saw "contact detonation" at first glance.
Thanks for posting those Vixen. I gather that posts #3129, 3130 and 3131 contain Westermann's observations, but #3133 and #3135 don't. Is that right?
Contact deformation refers to the deformation causes by two objects contacting and then deforming one, the other or both. Sometime the signs of contact causing the deformation can be quite aperient, such as surface indentations, sometimes not. At times depending on the mechanics of the contact, structure of the elements including surrounding support or strengthening elements the contact (or bearing area) can be well away from the deformation and failure area. Also depending on the distribution of loading in the bearing area the contact can be sufficiently distributive to not make distinctive contact deformation indications but still cause deformation and failure of the part.
ETA; Contact mechanics
So where does she say detonation? Everything she talks about can be attributed to welding.
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For the record, I'll note "requires temperature and time" which hardly seems to be consistent with a detonation. Cue Mr. Brightside is a fire alarm in 3, 2, 1.
Region 1 looks like a fillet weld to me, where the abutting plate has sheared away. Your thoughts?
whoanellie said:For the record, I'll note "requires temperature and time" which hardly seems to be consistent with a detonation. Cue Mr. Brightside is a fire alarm in 3, 2, 1.
You ninja'ed me on this, but yes it is correct. Hitting the top of a metal stake with a metal hammer will cause the top of the stake to "mushroom" -- i.e., it will deform in response to the hammer blows and do so in a way that even looking at it with the naked eye would compel you to conclude, "This has been hit with a hammer."
I haven't ignored the substantive claims. I've written on them at length, only to have Vixen ignore them or change subject, often by hurling ill-founded accusations such as the one under discussion. Therefore I will continue to call out behavior that I find objectionable in a debate, regardless of how they are named or taxonomized.
ETA: Yes, I agree that classifying a Gish gallop depends on how a fallacy is defined. My reason for not accepting it as an informal fallacy is that it's more properly a rhetorical technique. A single argument can be fallacious, e.g., an ad hominem argument. A Gish gallop is a rhetorical tactic involving several individual arguments, each of which can be logically sound. It is not the soundness of the argument or arguments that is in question, it's the gallop.
It's fair to say that you don't ignore substantive issues. But I do think the thread gets clogged by all these diversions.
It's fair to say that you don't ignore substantive issues. But I do think the thread gets clogged by all these diversions.