Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
Well, no. But you did request an explanation of various words.You can be as curious as you like. That doesn't mean that everyone else has to be equally curious for the same reasons.
Well, no. But you did request an explanation of various words.You can be as curious as you like. That doesn't mean that everyone else has to be equally curious for the same reasons.
Oh you're back to using the words of your critics as a magic spell.No, you don't get away with this. I never mentioned qualifications except JayUtah demanded to know. But I'm afraid psychology is a science. I don't see why I should pretend it is not a science just to avoid bullying. I haven't bolstered anything. As an analogy, how would you like me jeering that you aren't qualified and you said ah but I have a degree in international relations. So then I turn around and jeer that you are bolstering yourself up. That is the equivalent. Setting someone up just to jeer at them.
That's only partially true. You volunteered that you were a "psychology postgraduate" in response to someone else's observation that you seemed to understand little about the psychology of eyewitness testimony.No, you don't get away with this. I never mentioned qualifications except JayUtah demanded to know.
You tried to get out of a jam by splitting hairs and I challenged that hair-split. Throwing out new words to spackle over every previously rejected equivocation is not helpful.Well, no. But you did request an explanation of various words.
Which is a pattern of hers, such as when we thoroughly demolished her preferred source of Anders Bjorkman. When we pointed out that Bjorkman is an incompetent crank she first tried to bluster by saying our comments were a personality issue and that we just didn't like the man. When it became obvious this wasn't working she tried to disavow him but kept using him as a source, simply hoping that if she neglected to mention that he was her source we wouldn't realise it. When this also failed she whined about us being mean.No one cares what you're curious about personally. But you have spent years and many hundreds of pages arguing that the MS Estonia investigation was a coverup. You have previously suggested that the failure to recover the captain's body must be part of that coverup. Now that you can't support the premises of that argument, you're trying to pretend you're no longer making it without actually abandoning it.
No, it's not. If you're talking about the UK, then you misinterpreted (as usual) the article I linked. There's no legislation; that was just a report making recommendations to a parliamentary committee; there's no indication that any bill is actually in the works. If you're talking about the US, the bill that's in process will, if it passes, simply allow STEM education funds to be spent on accounting. This is something like the the US Congress redefining Lake Champlain to be one of the Great Lakes so that schoolchildren in the state of Vermont could have access to funds earmarked for studying the Great Lakes.Legislation is underway to officially make it a STEM.
Arithmetic and possibly algebra and statistics, not higher math. And there's also the issue of several bizarre pronouncements you've made that call your competence into question, such as conflating a questionable tax shelter with tax fraud.I am a numbers person.
As noted, no one demanded that.Your demand I must be a scientist to discuss this issue is your arbitrary rule . . .
As I said, unless you specifically majored in behavioral, experimental, or clinical psychology, then, no, it's not a science. It's simply a social science.. . . which you have changed because Psychology is a STEM and you can't stand that it is a science which is why you are now stipulating only sciences approved by you qualify.
She also still has yet to cite a non-Christopher Bollyn-adjacent source for the claim that Sweden did a forced disappearance on those two Egyptians. Sven Aner, despite being harshly critical of how Sweden handled their deportation, doesn't say that.Which is a pattern of hers, such as when we thoroughly demolished her preferred source of Anders Bjorkman. When we pointed out that Bjorkman is an incompetent crank she first tried to bluster by saying our comments were a personality issue and that we just didn't like the man. When it became obvious this wasn't working she tried to disavow him but kept using him as a source, simply hoping that if she neglected to mention that he was her source we wouldn't realise it. When this also failed she whined about us being mean.
...which he is. But what concerns me most is that Vixen assures us she qualified to ascertain that Anders Björkmann himself is a competent practitioner of applied physics and naval engineering. How one can determine that someone else is an expert in a field without also being an expert in that same field boggles the mind.When we pointed out that Bjorkman is an incompetent crank...
The resurrection of the search function (All hail developers!) has facilitated being able to short-circuit the fringe reset of various topics like Dr. Westermann's metallurgy. That said, there has actually been movement in the investigation. There has arisen a document that some say is fabricated and others say should be taken more seriously. But is there any discussion on that new development? No—every discussion inevitably devolves to Vixen whining about how she's being picked on and heckled and not being taken seriously for her very serious interest in the subject which is totally serious and not at all based on stuff she just makes up to get attention.When this also failed she whined about us being mean.
I have not read Hegel, but I have read Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Something about the remark quoted above—indeed much of this thread—reminds me of its last sentence (Proposition 7):Given I have read Hegel, I rather think I do know what dialectics mean.
For us plebs;I have not read Hegel, but I have read Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. Something about the remark quoted above—indeed much of this thread—reminds me of its last sentence (Proposition 7):
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen.Translated into English:
Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.
Legislation was enacted to make Rwanda officially a safe country.Legislation is underway to officially make it a STEM.
Ha!All you have is ad hom - a common logical fallacy associated with losing an argument.
I'm afraid that ship sailed off into the distance several threads ago.For us plebs;
“It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt"
That the captain had just come on duty is an indication (as if it were needed) that he was not the only person aboard capable of commanding the ship. The imagined incapacitation of the captain would be an emergency for him, but not for the ship.Post-mortems are carried out by a public coroner. The whole point of of carrying out a post-mortem in an accidental death is in the interests of justice. Given Andresson had literally just come on duty (1:00am) and the 'bang' or 'collision' sensation was heard about the same time, one would have thought determining the cause of the Captain's death (if by heart attack there would be no water in his lungs) then that would be in the public interest to know a possible contributing cause for the loss of comtrol of the vessel. Given the extraordinary lengths to retrieve Capt. Piht's briefcase, which was in Voronin's designated room, it would appear they decided early on their aim was Piht, so they didn't care about whatever was going on at the bridge.
My parameters were hours and minutes. No ship ever sunk in seconds, not even the Lusitania. If you are still unsure, consider the old duodecimal system of £, s. d ~vs~ the current decimal one. Reflect on whether anyone still uses the old notation and ask yourself why not. Think about the logic of using parameters that have no relevance.Yes, I understand the primary nomenclature for minutes (') and seconds (") as well as for feet and inches.
Do you get your loads of bollocks delivered by the ton?My parameters were hours and minutes. No ship ever sunk in seconds, not even the Lusitania. If you are still unsure, consider the old duodecimal system of £, s. d ~vs~ the current decimal one. Reflect on whether anyone still uses the old notation and ask yourself why not. Think about the logic of using parameters that have no relevance.
I have confirmed several times my psychology honours degree course was heavily experimental, behavioural and laboratory-based, with a mandatory fifteen lab reports utilising applied statistics (which constitutes one of the finals exams).No, it's not. If you're talking about the UK, then you misinterpreted (as usual) the article I linked. There's no legislation; that was just a report making recommendations to a parliamentary committee; there's no indication that any bill is actually in the works. If you're talking about the US, the bill that's in process will, if it passes, simply allow STEM education funds to be spent on accounting. This is something like the the US Congress redefining Lake Champlain to be one of the Great Lakes so that schoolchildren in the state of Vermont could have access to funds earmarked for studying the Great Lakes.
Arithmetic and possibly algebra and statistics, not higher math. And there's also the issue of several bizarre pronouncements you've made that call your competence into question, such as conflating a questionable tax shelter with tax fraud.
As noted, no one demanded that.
As I said, unless you specifically majored in behavioral, experimental, or clinical psychology, then, no, it's not a science. It's simply a social science.
Indeed, and that's why saying one sank in 35" is nonsense.No ship ever sunk in seconds...