Debate/Perceptions
Slowvehicle,
- This is the first.
carlitos:
Anyhoo, Jabba? Were the scientists biased, incompetent, or was there a conspiracy? Enquiring minds want to know.
Jabba:
Carlitos,
- I do suspect that the leaders were biased.
- I do not suspect that they were incompetent.
- I do not suspect any conspiracy.
- I do suspect, however, that the leaders let their biases affect their judgment.
- Your claim referring to that post:
You have repeatedly said that "bias" is the reason that 3 independent labs, performing 3 independent protocols, all came up with the "wrong" date. No matter how you try to soft-pedal it, that is a charge of incompetence--a level of incompetence that would end a career.
- Slowvehicle, I was simply answering carlitos' questions. I told him what I suspected. I was not "charging" anybody with anything. And finally, I don't even suspect "incompetence." I do suspect bias (and lots of it, actually) -- would you have me lie to carlitos, or simply not answer his question?
- And, keep in mind that we are all biased -- some more than others.
- Here's the other one.
Jabba:
- So anyway, I’ve been trying to show potential weakness in the carbon dating process.
- Most recently, I’ve been trying to show why we shouldn’t yet dismiss the possibility of a near-invisible patch. I believe that the papers I’ve referenced do, in fact, preclude an out-of-hand dismissal of that possibility, in that 1) they appear to show significant evidence missed by the people responsible for the dating, and 2) the something missed, according to these papers, was evidence of patching.
- You guys do not believe that the papers I’ve referenced do, in fact, preclude an out-of-hand dismissal of that possibility.
- For now, I'm happy to leave that as a clear point of disagreement between us. In other words, my case for a semi-invisible patch is, at least momentarily, closed.
- But then, a near-invisible patch is only one of the possible explanations for that late date...
Your claim re that post:
You have repeatedly claimed that fabric experts, who have actually had access to study the linen, "must have missed" an "invisible repair" (or "some patching"), when the site of the testing samples was chosen because it shows no sign of any such. (and, in fact, you have ignored evidence that demonstrates that the sample area is undisturbed, at the very structural level.
- I still seems obvious to me that they did miss some things, and I don't understand why you guys don't, at least, suspect that they did. Again, would you have me not express my opinion...?
--- Jabba