arthwollipot
Observer of Phenomena, Pronouns: he/him
No thanks.
Actually you're then missing another post-death option.Nvm: Will save the rest for epitath
Damn. I'm gonna make a lousy ressurected savior if I can't get my act together, here.Actually you're then missing another post-death option.
You got me wrong, I am not trying to prove that, it's science not math or distillation of ethanol, so proof is not even possible, I would think you would know that.It would seem that @bobdroege7 has abandoned his attempts to prove the Lirey cloth is the shroud of Jesus.
Bollocks. In your desperate need for the cloth to be genuine, despite the plethora of evidence that it's a medieval creation, you spam garbage at us.I am just showing that the evidence shows the carbon dating was unreliable.
Again, bollocks. There are a handful of cranks you repetitiously make the same nonsensical assertions and continue to produce "articles" based on those assertions. The facts remains that the cloth was examined extensively before the sampling and the area selected was part of the main cloth, not some magically invisible addition.Here is one, but there are numerous papers showing that the samples taken from the shroud are not homogenous, indicating the shroud dating was unreliable.#
Yeah,. right. This "paper", a posting to an unreviewed website, demonstrates absolutely nothing. Atkinson, like his cronies Riani, Fanti and Crosilla, don't even come to a conclusion? Have you actually bothered to read this "paper", or are you back to spamming random Google results to this forum?![]()
Carbon Dating of the Shroud of Turin: Partially Labelled Regressors and the Design of Experiments
The twelve results from the 1988 radio carbon dating of the Shroud of Turin show surprising heterogeneity. We try to explain this lack of homogeneity by regression on spatial coordinates. However, although the locations of the samples sent to thewww.academia.edu
First, one reference is not spamming.Bollocks. In your desperate need for the cloth to be genuine, despite the plethora of evidence that it's a medieval creation, you spam garbage at us.
Again, bollocks. There are a handful of cranks you repetitiously make the same nonsensical assertions and continue to produce "articles" based on those assertions. The facts remains that the cloth was examined extensively before the sampling and the area selected was part of the main cloth, not some magically invisible addition.
Yeah,. right. This "paper", a posting to an unreviewed website, demonstrates absolutely nothing. Atkinson, like his cronies Riani, Fanti and Crosilla, don't even come to a conclusion? Have you actually bothered to read this "paper", or are you back to spamming random Google results to this forum?
It's actually amusing that Atkinson, et al, produce this nonsense as their speculations don't even conform to the actual usage of the sampled material by the three laboratories.
In other world, more shroudie pseudo-scientific garbage.
In summary.
1. The claims of Atkinson et al are nonsense.
2. They don't effect the reliability of the radiocarbon dating in the slightest.
3. They don't address all the other data showing the Lirey cloth is a medieval fabrication.
First, one reference is not spamming.
"Not from the main cloth" is an outright lie.Second, you appear to be unaware of where the samples for the Damon paper were from, in other words, the samples were not from the main cloth, but from the edge next to where the Raes samples was taken.
Yep. He's talking nonsense because, as he admits, he doesn't know where the sub-samples came from. And he actually gets the samples wromng too.Third, you claim Atkinson et al do not come to a conclusion, well here it is: "Due to the heterogeneity of the data and the evidence of a strong linear trend the twelve measurements of the age of the TS cannot be considered as repeated measurements of a single unknown quantity."
Which reflects what was originally presented in the original Damon paper, that there was inhomogeneity in the samples taken. I guess I have to ask you what inhomogeneity means, since it seems to be beyond you.
No he's not. Firstly as Atkinson is forced to admit he doesn't actually know the order of the samples, hence his "gradient" claims is rather dubious.With respect to inhomogeneity, Atkinson is on the same page as Damon, so not nonsense.

The reliability of radiocarbon dating is not the issue, the issue is the sampling.
Bollocks.And next to lastly, the only piece of evidence that shows the shroud to be a medieval fabrication is the Damon paper.
Oh good grief...... This is really beyond stupid.And now lastly, the size of the components of the image are 200 to 600 nanometers, far too small to be made by painting because that is smaller than any fiber of any paintbrush.
One that is much older that the "Turin shroud".BTW, @bobdroege7 you stated that "the samples were not from the main cloth, but from the edge next to where the Raes samples was taken", but in what way is that not part of the "main cloth"?
What exactly is the "main cloth"?
But it's just bizarre to me that anyone with a moderately functional brain can keep maintaining that the sampled area was a patch or invisibly re-woven or magically contaminated or whatever the nonsense due jour is, in the face of the expertise directed at the selection of the sampled area, both before the dating process started and subsequently. It's reality denial in it's crudest form, pure "I don't like the result so it must be wrong" magical thinking.One that is much older that the "Turin shroud".
And the carbon dating is no more than the cherry on the icing.But it's just bizarre to me that anyone with a moderately functional brain can keep maintaining that the sampled area was a patch or invisibly re-woven or magically contaminated or whatever the nonsense due jour is, in the face of the expertise directed at the selection of the sampled area, both before the dating process started and subsequently. It's reality denial in it's crudest form, pure "I don't like the result so it must be wrong" magical thinking.
Well yes. But the shroudies obsess on that test.And the carbon dating is no more than the cherry on the icing.
And amazing as well.But it's just bizarre to me that anyone with a moderately functional brain can keep maintaining that the sampled area was a patch or invisibly re-woven or magically contaminated or whatever the nonsense due jour is, in the face of the expertise directed at the selection of the sampled area, both before the dating process started and subsequently. It's reality denial in it's crudest form, pure "I don't like the result so it must be wrong" magical thinking.
And amazing as well.
Cotton was found woven into the sampled area.
That's conclusive evidence of a repair, reweave, or a patch.
Because, according to the Pentateuch, Jews are not allowed to wear cloths woven of different fibers.

The main cloth is the main part of the cloth, free from any patches, reweaves, or repairs.BTW, @bobdroege7 you stated that "the samples were not from the main cloth, but from the edge next to where the Raes samples was taken", but in what way is that not part of the "main cloth"?
What exactly is the "main cloth"?
Please provide evidence that any experts decided where to sample the shroud.But it's just bizarre to me that anyone with a moderately functional brain can keep maintaining that the sampled area was a patch or invisibly re-woven or magically contaminated or whatever the nonsense due jour is, in the face of the expertise directed at the selection of the sampled area, both before the dating process started and subsequently. It's reality denial in it's crudest form, pure "I don't like the result so it must be wrong" magical thinking.