Jabba said:
- Over the past 6 months there must have been (in combination) at least 100 “responses” (questions, comments and attacks) (not counting repeats) that I have not "answered" (not responded to)…
- But then, I probably spend about 4 hours a day trying to answer your responses. That’s all the time that I can reasonably spend on this project – and, other than my family, this project is my primary investment these days.
It's taken me less than four hours total to demonstrate that all of your arguments are flawed (well, not counting the education necessary to understand the topics, that is--and if you're not willing to put that time in, why are you bothering to argue about it?).
And if this project is your primary investment, that's rather sad (this is an internet discussion--it's not important), and to my mind proof that you're not honestly investigating this issue. You're lookging for how your pet hypothesis can be right--because reading this thread for four hours would show that your arguments are wrong.
- If you look back over my 491 posts so far, you’ll see that the vast majority (at least) are responding directly to at least one of your responses (looking quickly, I think that ALL of my posts are responding – at least indirectly -- to at least one of them).
Yeah. That's call "having a conversation". Rather an important part of being a member of a DISCUSSION board.
- And then, you fuss at me for what I have left unanswered…
- Which is a problem for me.
You've been playing lawyer, so you've ignored everything about WHY we're complaining about what you've left unanswered. It's not the quantity of what you've left unaddressed, but the quality. You've attempted to address the easy bits (and failed utterly at that), but left unaddressed issues of critical importance to your arguments. You can't, because you're not trying to figure out what's true, you're trying to construct an argument that allows you to think you're right.
- And again, when I try to answer one response, I usually provoke at least a few more. And so, by trying to answer one response, I generally accumulate multiple new ones, and rather than gradually reduce the number of unanswered responses on my table -- by trying to answer them -- I quickly increase them instead...
Yeah--that's the difference between being a lawyer and being a scientist. A lawyer tries to make counter-arguments go away. A scientist tries to address the facts. The reason your "answers" generate more questions is that your answers are mere obfuscations, rather than serious attemtps to address the facts. Of course, if you WERE seriously trying to address the facts your answers would generate more questions as well. Ever wonder why the number of scientific publications have increased nearly exponentially over the past few decades?
- Where do you disagree with what I’ve just said?
I don't disagree with any of the facts. Your INTERPRETATION, however, is about as accurate as a blind archer.
- Do you want me to spend more time on this? Do you want me to do a better job of selecting what to answer next?
- If you guys don’t have a sincere solution, I’ll offer mine.
I have one: re-examine the data presented thus far in this thread. The data presented here is sufficient to demonstrate to any honest investigator that the shroud is a fraud. If that's not enough (and I can't imagine how, because experts have presented extremely well-documented arguments which you haven't even TRIED to refute), I'd suggest starting with researching basic archaeological techniques. Ignore ALL legal arguments, and ALL research on how to have an argument--these are irrelevant to this conversationo, and you've only ever used these to try to avoid addressing arguments anyway.
If you can't be bothered to learn the basics of the science you're attempting to discuss--in this case, archaeology--you don't care enough about this topic to have a serious conversation. It's really that simple.
Understand, I'm not expecting you to become an expert. I only dabble with it myself, after all--I'm the last person to demand you become an expert. But I AM saying you should know enough to be able to avoid making basic errors, and to understand how to research these issues.
wardenclyffe said:
In fairness, the invisible patch (which is neither invisible nor does it use more recent fabric) theory is an attempt to explain away the C14 evidence.
Correct. It's an attempt to
explain away the data. This is completely different from ADDRESSING the data. Jabba--and the shroud believers in general--are trying to find any argument they can to discredit the C14 data, including manufacturing doubt. There's NO evidence that there was ever a patch. This is a post-hoc explanation without any justification, support, or proof.