ozeco41
Philosopher
Wow.Sorry Ozeco41, your wrong and that is shown in the seismic data, the towers were highly
Efficient at absorbing and redirecting the impacts energy.
Try reading what I said CC
Then tell me which bits of my post that you quoted are wrong. Here I'll parse it for you:
Is it wise to not build false implications out of partial truths?Please take care - all of you - that you don't build false implications out of partial truths.
Does the conditional "could" make the statement a truism?@DGM "If the design was not able to flex and respond to the impact it could have collapsed immediately." flexure is a reality in any structure. Your conditional could makes the first assertion a truism.
Is the causal relationship unproven if proof has not been given? Excuse the circularity but there was no proof in the argument as presented. Which was what I claimed. NOR reference to external or previous proof.But the causal relationship "flexure" >> "not collapse" is not necessarily true. Possibly isn't true but is definitely unproven at this stage.
I'll insist that bit is true.AND
"...the WTC design flexed" and "did not collapse right away" is the true sequence
If you disagree with that bit you need to address the factor I identified i.e. whether or not extra WTC flexibility ALONE determined the delay before collapse.but the two issues are not directly causally related.
Well we could say it but my point is that it is not proven by the statements made in the argument up to that stage.We cannot say "the Twins did not collapse immediately because they were flexible".
Which of those three assertions and one conditional concession do you disagree with?You may not be intending that implication but is is there - so Sander has queried the implication and it looks like Bravin has accepted it. I may be wrong on that point.
You assert that I am wrong but you do so by trying to provide the proof of causality which I said was missing? Why are you providing it if it wasn't missing?It may be that WTC design had more flexibility which helped it more than other designs but the causality is not proven at this stage.
Begging the question about whether some proof or even "the" proof lies in the seismic data - the fact that YOU see the need to add some proof actually proves my point. The proof wasn't stated. It is needed to ensure the validity of the reasoning and to avoid unsupported inferences.
AND I note that you don't query the last point I made for Bravin. There is still no proof referred to in the series of posts that collapse would have immediately followed impact if the building had been less flexible. How much less flexible would be needed to guarantee collapse immediately on impact?
As I said for Sander "So I am cautioning - disregard the implication of proven causality. The question is much more subtle."
Don't miss the subtlety of "the question" or my comments.