The word your looking for is "implication",
"He said do not look down" is the only statement in that quote that is attributed to the firefighter.
Therefore no one said there were actually bodies present.
If anyone needed proof that the truth movement is dead, this is it. Grasping at straws trying to make a dead man say things he didn't say.
The dictionary needs a new word, "pathetic" doesn't come close.
uh huh...that the best you got?
I like inference. Tell me why I'm wrong - don't just assert.
You're lucky my sound isn't working, or else I'd just transcribe the interview myself.
However, going by the quote provided in this thread, it's pretty obvious that "we're stepping over people" is a statement attributed to the firefighter. Prior to this statement, Jennings said he kept asking the firefighter why he shouldn't look down--remember, the suggestion not to look down came from the firefighter. Jennings asked why, and it was the firefighter who answered: "We're stepping over people."
This is the most plausible interpretation of his statements, and any other interpretation is simply ludicrous.
I like inference. Tell me why I'm wrong - don't just assert.
You're lucky my sound isn't working, or else I'd just transcribe the interview myself.
However, going by the quote provided in this thread, it's pretty obvious that "we're stepping over people" is a statement attributed to the firefighter. Prior to this statement, Jennings said he kept asking the firefighter why he shouldn't look down--remember, the suggestion not to look down came from the firefighter. Jennings asked why, and it was the firefighter who answered: "We're stepping over people."
This is the most plausible interpretation of his statements, and any other interpretation is simply ludicrous.
Inference is something a listener or observer does, implication is something in a statement which is to be inferred by the listener or reader.
Inference means the act or process of inferring.
Yes, and I inferred that "there were bodies on the floor" based on what Jennings' account. Hence my use of "inference" was correct.
No, it's not. The two sentences in question are in different voices. "He said do not look down" is in the third person because it's Jennings relaying what the fireman told him.
"And we're stepping over people and you know you could feel when you're stepping over people" is Jennings speaking in the second person, the way that is done in casual conversation, relaying his personal experience.
This is confirmed in Jennings' clarification of his statement:
"I said it felt like I was stepping over them but I never saw any".
Please do not continue to argue this point. You've already made yourself look foolish enough and your woeful grasp of grammar makes it apparent you are not in a position to refute anything I've said.
Again, his "clarification" is completely consistent with the claim that there were bodies on the floor. Why did the firefighter tell him not to look down? What's the answer to this question?
Are you being smug? We are talking about a dead man, show some respect.
Inference means the act or process of inferring.
Yes, and I inferred that "there were bodies on the floor" based on what Jennings' account. Hence my use of "inference" was correct.
No it wasn't. You said: "The inference that there were bodies on the floor is explicit." How can an inference be explicit? You meant that the implication is explicit.
No it wasn't. You said: "The inference that there were bodies on the floor is explicit." How can an inference be explicit? You meant that the implication is explicit.
It is explicit, meaning clear and direct.
1. "We're stepping over bodies."
2. Therefore, there were bodies on the floor.
"The act or process of deriving logical conclusions from premises known or assumed to be true."
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/inference
The existence of bodies on the floor is clearly implied.
Did you not even read what I wrote?
Yes, he thought there were bodies there. That was his inference from the fireman saying "do not look down."
It is explicit, meaning clear and direct.
1. "We're stepping over bodies."
2. Therefore, there were bodies on the floor.
Yep, and I stand by what I wrote.
He also asked the firefighter why he shouldn't look down, and he got a direct answer. Do you concede that, if his testimony is credible, it's likely that there were bodies in WTC7 prior to its collapse?
It is explicit, meaning clear and direct.
1. "We're stepping over bodies."
2. Therefore, there were bodies on the floor.
Yes, and I inferred that "there were bodies on the floor" based on what Jennings' account. Hence my use of "inference" was correct.
Again, his "clarification" is completely consistent with the claim that there were bodies on the floor.
Why did the firefighter tell him not to look down? What's the answer to this question?
He also asked the firefighter why he shouldn't look down, and he got a direct answer.