Recovering Agnostic
Back Pew Heckler
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2012
- Messages
- 745
Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper,"
Are you the keymaster?
Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper,"
Perhaps 'gatekeeper' is a typo and what Jabba really wants is a 'gamekeeper'.
Akhenaten,
- Please excuse my spelling.
--- jabba
Wollery,
- You guys haven't let me use my form of debate.
- Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper," who will cooperate with me as I try to keep narrowing our focus.
- I think those are the keys to effective debate. Eventually, we'll either resolve a basic disagreement, or precisely identify a basic disagreement for which neither of us has anything more to say, and can -- momentarily at least -- agree to disagree.
- For the moment, I'm focusing on the possibility that the carbon dating sample involved a patch.
Jabba, "...the guy who claims to do it" is the expert the pro-authenticity advocates quote.
Remember?
Also please keep in mind there is no such thing as a truly invisible patch.
Remember?
It's always visible from the reverse side of the repaired cloth.
Ward,
- Just followed your suggestion. I.E.,
- I think that I asked about this previously (somewhere on Dan’s blog) — but, if I did, I can’t find it…
- According to Michael Ehrlich — the head of “Without a Trace,” the company to which Joe Marino refers when claiming that a really invisible patch is possible — the process for producing a really invisible patch requires the exclusive use of undamaged threads from the original cloth. In other words, even if this process were used on the carbon dating sample from the Shroud, the patch should show the same age as the rest of the cloth…
- Do we have a counter claim?
- (I have a possibility, but don’t know that it really makes sense.)
- I do have a possibility in mind -- which makes it difficult for me to dump (accept the refutation of) the patch theory altogether, but won't mention it till I get some word back (or, fail to get any word back) from my friends.
--- Jabba
- To see my question on the Shroudie cite, go to http://shroudstory.com/.
- Go down the right-hand menu to "comments."
- I just got an answer.
--- Jabba
Wollery,
- You guys haven't let me use my form of debate.
- Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper," who will cooperate with me as I try to keep narrowing our focus. I will cooperate with your spokesperson as he or she tries to narrow their own choice of focus.
- I think those are the keys to effective debate. Eventually, we'll either resolve a basic disagreement, or precisely identify a basic disagreement for which neither of us has anything more to say, and can -- momentarily at least -- agree to disagree.
- Then, we can go on to the next basic disagreement.
- Eventually, we'll get to a point where neither of us has much more to say and any heretofore neutral members of an audience can judge for themselves as to who has the best argument.
- For the moment, I'm focusing on the possibility that the carbon dating sample involved a patch.
--- Jabba
...- For the moment, I'm focusing on the possibility that the carbon dating sample involved a patch. ...
Wollery,
- You guys haven't let me use my form of debate.
- Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper," who will cooperate with me as I try to keep narrowing our focus. I will cooperate with your spokesperson as he or she tries to narrow their own choice of focus.
- I think those are the keys to effective debate. Eventually, we'll either resolve a basic disagreement, or precisely identify a basic disagreement for which neither of us has anything more to say, and can -- momentarily at least -- agree to disagree.
- Then, we can go on to the next basic disagreement.
- Eventually, we'll get to a point where neither of us has much more to say and any heretofore neutral members of an audience can judge for themselves as to who has the best argument.
- For the moment, I'm focusing on the possibility that the carbon dating sample involved a patch.
--- Jabba
- You guys haven't let me use my form of debate.
- Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper," who will cooperate with me as I try to keep narrowing our focus. I will cooperate with your spokesperson as he or she tries to narrow their own choice of focus.
- I think those are the keys to effective debate. Eventually, we'll either resolve a basic disagreement, or precisely identify a basic disagreement for which neither of us has anything more to say, and can -- momentarily at least -- agree to disagree.
- Then, we can go on to the next basic disagreement.
- Eventually, we'll get to a point where neither of us has much more to say and any heretofore neutral members of an audience can judge for themselves as to who has the best argument.
--- Jabba
…..Will you not also need to organise everyone here into different streams and divisions, voting to appoint team leaders who are awarded different levels of posting privileges etc, whence we can all be formally enrolled into quite different forums and websites unconnected with JREF? I think you will find the urge to do that irresistable.
- To see my question on the Shroudie cite, go to http://shroudstory.com/.
- Go down the right-hand menu to "comments."
- I just got an answer.
--- Jabba
- To see my question on the Shroudie cite, go to http://shroudstory.com/.
- Go down the right-hand menu to "comments."
Because it's not suited to questions of fact.Wollery,
- You guys haven't let me use my form of debate.
The focus is as narrow as it needs to be: the C14 dating.- Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper," who will cooperate with me as I try to keep narrowing our focus. I will cooperate with your spokesperson as he or she tries to narrow their own choice of focus.
No. Jabba, questions of fact are never, ever resolved by deciding who has the best or most effective argument. You keep making this basic error. Effective debate is what a person needs when arguing for or against opinions - things like politics, art appreciation, literary criticisms. Factual investigations - things like how old is the TS - are resolved by scientific experiments (the C14 dating).- I think those are the keys to effective debate. Eventually, we'll either resolve a basic disagreement, or precisely identify a basic disagreement for which neither of us has anything more to say, and can -- momentarily at least -- agree to disagree.
- Then, we can go on to the next basic disagreement.
- Eventually, we'll get to a point where neither of us has much more to say and any heretofore neutral members of an audience can judge for themselves as to who has the best argument.
Really? Even though there is no visible patch in the sampled area, and you've been told, over and over again, that the invisible patch uses fibres from the existing cloth so would not alter the C14 results, and an invisible patch is visible on the reverse side anyway? Why in the name of all you hold dear would you go back to this long discredited and functionally impossible patch idea?- For the moment, I'm focusing on the possibility that the carbon dating sample involved a patch.
Ward,And the proper way to answer that answer is, "If Thibault could 'see' different types of fiber, then how could the patch possibly be invisible?"...
It makes this type of sense:Ward,
- At this point, my reluctance to fully accept that there was no patch involved does not depend upon the patch being "invisible."
- The one answer I got on the Porter blog actually alluded to the possibility I had alluded to previously. As I recall, neither those doing the dating nor those preparing for the dating, claimed to do the examinations (that Rogers, Raes, Brown and the Los Alamos National Laboratory did on the Shroud, or the sticky tapes) that turned up the evidence for patching. Also, Flury-Lemburg apparently didn't know about "reversing," and might have prematurely discounted the patch possibility due to there being no obvious evidence on the back of the Shroud.
- In other words, there appears to have been some patching going on that those really involved in the dating process didn't see because they didn't use the examination techniques necessary to see it.
- Does that make significant sense?
--- Jabba
Ward,
- At this point, my reluctance to fully accept that there was no patch involved does not depend upon the patch being "invisible."
- The one answer I got on the Porter blog actually alluded to the possibility I had alluded to previously. As I recall, neither those doing the dating nor those preparing for the dating, claimed to do the examinations (that Rogers, Raes, Brown and the Los Alamos National Laboratory did on the Shroud, or the sticky tapes) that turned up the evidence for patching. Also, Flury-Lemburg apparently didn't know about "reversing," and might have prematurely discounted the patch possibility due to there being no obvious evidence on the back of the Shroud.
- In other words, there appears to have been some patching going on that those really involved in the dating process didn't see because they didn't use the examination techniques necessary to see it.
- Does that make significant sense?
--- Jabba
Yes, it does. Otherwise it would be observed.Ward,
- At this point, my reluctance to fully accept that there was no patch involved does not depend upon the patch being "invisible."
Which still leaves you with the patch being comprised of threads from the original, and hence the dating must be correct.- The one answer I got on the Porter blog actually alluded to the possibility I had alluded to previously. As I recall, neither those doing the dating nor those preparing for the dating, claimed to do the examinations (that Rogers, Raes, Brown and the Los Alamos National Laboratory did on the Shroud, or the sticky tapes) that turned up the evidence for patching. Also, Flury-Lemburg apparently didn't know about "reversing," and might have prematurely discounted the patch possibility due to there being no obvious evidence on the back of the Shroud.
Now, you are oscillating between invisible patches that nobody can detect (how is it that you can?) and detectable patches (how come the scientific team didn't)- In other words, there appears to have been some patching going on that those really involved in the dating process didn't see because they didn't use the examination techniques necessary to see it.
Nope.- Does that make significant sense?
--- Jabba
If the patch was visible, and nobody involved with the testing reports seeing it, that means they were all either incompetent or dishonest. Is that your opinion? That they were incompetent or liars?- At this point, my reluctance to fully accept that there was no patch involved does not depend upon the patch being "invisible."
- The one answer I got on the Porter blog actually alluded to the possibility I had alluded to previously. As I recall, neither those doing the dating nor those preparing for the dating, claimed to do the examinations (that Rogers, Raes, Brown and the Los Alamos National Laboratory did on the Shroud, or the sticky tapes) that turned up the evidence for patching. Also, Flury-Lemburg apparently didn't know about "reversing," and might have prematurely discounted the patch possibility due to there being no obvious evidence on the back of the Shroud.
- In other words, there appears to have been some patching going on that those really involved in the dating process didn't see because they didn't use the examination techniques necessary to see it.
- Does that make significant sense?
Gee--legitimate scientists weren't involved in a worthless pseudo-study where the conclusion was already known from the start. The SHOCK!Jabba said:As I recall, neither those doing the dating nor those preparing for the dating, claimed to do the examinations (that Rogers, Raes, Brown and the Los Alamos National Laboratory did on the Shroud, or the sticky tapes) that turned up the evidence for patching.
Jabba, reweaving techniques ARE NOT INVISIBLE. Any careful analysis of a patched cloth will show evidence of reweaving. And even if they were, they use fibers of material from the the cloth itself.Also, Flury-Lemburg apparently didn't know about "reversing," and might have prematurely discounted the patch possibility due to there being no obvious evidence on the back of the Shroud.
Since you obviously don't care what the experts say, why don't you explain to us the evidence for an invisible patch. Remember, this is only hurting your case--if there was a rewoven patch, it would be a composite sample of the entire shroud. Meaning that even if this line of reasoning was right (and it's not), it would be better support for our argument than we currently have.- In other words, there appears to have been some patching going on that those really involved in the dating process didn't see because they didn't use the examination techniques necessary to see it.
Nope. It's merely more wishful thinking, ignoring facts, and pretending that just because you say it, it's therefore true.- Does that make significant sense?
Your "form of debate" is to dictates the terms of the debate to unfairly favor your side, while placing dishonest restrictions to your opponents. We've proven that.- You guys haven't let me use my form of debate.
Impossible. We've TRIED to limit the debate. We've tried to limit it to the C14 dating. Now you want to talk about blood, patches, and the style of debate. YOU changed the topic, not us.- Give me one friendly "spokesperson," or "gatekeeper," who will cooperate with me as I try to keep narrowing our focus.
I notice that the option "I admit I was wrong and accept the truth" isn't included here.- I think those are the keys to effective debate. Eventually, we'll either resolve a basic disagreement, or precisely identify a basic disagreement for which neither of us has anything more to say, and can -- momentarily at least -- agree to disagree.
They can do that now. On our side we have the best C14 data ever taken, the anatomy evidence, the imaging data, the fact that the shroud is dramatically faided from the original version, etc. ad nauseum. On your side you've got equivocations, wanna-be lawyer jargon, and an abject refusal to be pinned down on any point whatever. No honest observer can possibly remain neutral at this point--nor can they side with you.- Eventually, we'll get to a point where neither of us has much more to say and any heretofore neutral members of an audience can judge for themselves as to who has the best argument.
You've been through this before. It's a sad attempt to deny the obvious: the decision of where to take the 14C samples was very carefully discussed in advance to ensure it represented the rest of the shroud. Any patch would have been excluded. Even an invisible one would have been made from the remaining shroud material.Ward,
- At this point, my reluctance to fully accept that there was no patch involved does not depend upon the patch being "invisible."
- The one answer I got on the Porter blog actually alluded to the possibility I had alluded to previously. As I recall, neither those doing the dating nor those preparing for the dating, claimed to do the examinations (that Rogers, Raes, Brown and the Los Alamos National Laboratory did on the Shroud, or the sticky tapes) that turned up the evidence for patching. Also, Flury-Lemburg apparently didn't know about "reversing," and might have prematurely discounted the patch possibility due to there being no obvious evidence on the back of the Shroud.
- In other words, there appears to have been some patching going on that those really involved in the dating process didn't see because they didn't use the examination techniques necessary to see it.
- Does that make significant sense?
--- Jabba