Slowvehicle,
- This is the first.
carlitos:
Anyhoo, Jabba? Were the scientists biased, incompetent, or was there a conspiracy? Enquiring minds want to know.
Jabba:
Carlitos,
- I do suspect that the leaders were biased.
- I do not suspect that they were incompetent.
- I do not suspect any conspiracy.
- I do suspect, however, that the leaders let their biases affect their judgment.
You have not said who these 'leaders' were, nor how they were biased, nor how such bias "affecting their judgement" (which is accusing them of either incompetence or downright fraud) could make an objective process where a machine just spits out numbers into something which could give an inaccurate result.
If you are going to level charges of bias against unnamed people, the least you could do is to explain
how their bias could affect the carbon dating process.
- Your claim referring to that post:
You have repeatedly said that "bias" is the reason that 3 independent labs, performing 3 independent protocols, all came up with the "wrong" date. No matter how you try to soft-pedal it, that is a charge of incompetence--a level of incompetence that would end a career.
- Slowvehicle, I was simply answering carlitos' questions. I told him what I suspected. I was not "charging" anybody with anything. And finally, I don't even suspect "incompetence." I do suspect bias (and lots of it, actually) -- would you have me lie to carlitos, or simply not answer his question?
- And, keep in mind that we are all biased -- some more than others.
Which is why we use the scientific method, so that any bias is controlled for. That includes any bias towards a 1st century date as well as any bias against it.
I think you may be falling into the trap of assuming that all scientists must be atheists, and also that all atheists/sceptics are biased towards a mediaeval date. Neither of these things is true. Several of the scientists involved in the carbon dating processes were Christians, and what sceptics are biased towards is evidence, no matter that leads to. I have been an atheist from birth and I would have no problem accepting a 1st century date IF the evidence suggested that was the case.
Think this through. You accuse some 'leaders' of bias, and claim that you suspect that their bias has made them come up with an inaccurate date. Unless you propose that a scientist's views (and it's important to note that several of these particular scientists were Christians) can in some way affect a machine's output in a hitherto unsuspected and paranormal way, then the only way bias could affect the carbon dating in three independent laboratories (one of which introduced a blinding step) is if the scientists in question either:
a) conspired to fraudulently suppress the real results and reported an inaccurate date, or conspired to fraudulently add extraneous new material to the sample
or
b) were so incompetent that they could not operate the machines correctly
There are no other ways that 'bias' could affect what is a process of calculation. You claim you are not accusing them of conspiracy or incompetence, but you fail to explain
how 'bias' could affect the results. You have also not shown any evidence that there was bias, either towards or against a 1st century or 14th century date, on the part of any of the scientists involved.
If you must rely on 'bias' as your explanation for three independent laboratories (who reported their results to the British Museum, not to each other) for reporting an inaccurate date, you must explain how such bias affected the dating.
Which step(s) of the carbon dating process involve judgement on the part of those carrying out the process? How would 'bias' affect that judgement?
ETA Wollery has given you a simplified explanation of the process. Where does the judgement come in? Please explain your thinking here, Jabba.
- Here's the other one.
Jabba:
- So anyway, I’ve been trying to show potential weakness in the carbon dating process.
- Most recently, I’ve been trying to show why we shouldn’t yet dismiss the possibility of a near-invisible patch. I believe that the papers I’ve referenced do, in fact, preclude an out-of-hand dismissal of that possibility, in that 1) they appear to show significant evidence missed by the people responsible for the dating, and 2) the something missed, according to these papers, was evidence of patching.
- You guys do not believe that the papers I’ve referenced do, in fact, preclude an out-of-hand dismissal of that possibility.
- For now, I'm happy to leave that as a clear point of disagreement between us. In other words, my case for a semi-invisible patch is, at least momentarily, closed.
- But then, a near-invisible patch is only one of the possible explanations for that late date...
Your claim re that post:
You have repeatedly claimed that fabric experts, who have actually had access to study the linen, "must have missed" an "invisible repair" (or "some patching"), when the site of the testing samples was chosen because it shows no sign of any such. (and, in fact, you have ignored evidence that demonstrates that the sample area is undisturbed, at the very structural level.
- I still seems obvious to me that they did miss some things, and I don't understand why you guys don't, at least, suspect that they did. Again, would you have me not express my opinion...?
Given the linen banding, which you have been shown several times, it simply is not possible for there to have been any patching/repair/reweaving in the sampled area. The banding is an artefact of the weaving process, it is invisible to the naked eye and continues uninterrupted through the sampled area.
The only evidence you have provided in support of your contention that all those textile experts, scientists and members of the Catholic church who inspected the shroud "obviously" missed some things is that you really, really want them to have missed something. I hate to tell you this, but a person's desires are not evidence.
You are entitled to your opinion, and to express it, but you are not entitled to your own facts. The facts stand by themselves - there is no patching/repair/reweaving in that area.