They are psychologically constrained to a significant degree.
No, on this point it is the conspiracy theorists whose thinking is constraint. They demand to see the problem only in black and white and demand that all descriptions of seeing conditions must fit their straw-man molds. Any variance in evidence or testimony is attributed to the failure to maintain some hypothetical mandate of consistency. Such a mandate nor physical condition does not exist; it is strictly the pasted-on product of conspiracy theorists -- a particular (banned) one of late.
Conspiracy theorists are forever trying to paste their simplistic notions of the world onto others as new "rules" that must be followed. Vigorously begged questions are still begged.
There's the classic PAtrick Moore interview with Neil Armstrong from 1970 in which Armstrong famously said he and the others saw no stars.
No. Armstrong said he saw no stars except through the spacecraft optics. Contrary to your dishonest cherry-pick of this interview, Armstrong told Sir Patrick that indeed other astronauts
had seen stars, and he correctly attributed that difference to differences in seeing conditions, time, opportunity, etc.
Selective quotation, and a straw man. Argument rejected.
But then Alan Shepard in his Moon Shot book said stars were easily seen.
Mentioned now on other forums by three sock puppets in the past 48 hours.
Moon Shot had three authors, only one of which was an astronaut. You bear the burden to prove the scope of any statement regarding star visibility came from an appropriate author and that you're representing it here fairly.
I asked both the Apollo 14 surface crew about it, and I was told visibility varied. Mitchell informed me special steps had to be taken to see stars while standing on the surface.
Straw man. Argument rejected.
It is a contradiction without resolution or explanation by the pro Apollo camp group and is absolute proof of hoax.
Utter nonsense.
In fact the position of the Apollo debunkers has been the same, unaltered since the beginning of the debate. The position is that whether or not one sees stars depends on several conditions that varied naturally from observation to observation, and from observer to observer. That answer has never wavered in the slightest.
However, every hoax claimant selectively quotes this or that witness and applies the statements to a silly, simplistic set of expectations that they assume their critics must share. Each and every claimant makes the same inane straw-man argument, ignores the rebuttal, and runs off claiming he has not received a satisfactory answer.
Ignoring the refutation -- argument rejected.
Patrick Moore is marvelous. I love his SKY AT NIGHT mag.
Irrelevant attempt to curry favor.
Armstrong says one thing and Shepard another. They are lying. Apollo was a hoax. Plain as that.
No,
you are lying. You blatantly misrepresented Armstrong's statement by leaving out the part where he directly supports the Apollo defenders' claims about varying seeing conditions and directly contradicts your dishonest summary of his interview.
Do you really think we're not familiar with the
entire Armstrong interview and not just the part you cherry-pick?