Ice Age Beasts Blasted from Space
ianare writes "Eight tusks and a bison skull all show signs of having being blasted with iron-nickel fragments, typical meteorite material. Raised, burnt surface rings trace the point of entry of high-velocity projectiles; and the punctures are on only one side, consistent with a blast coming from a single direction. But the team was astonished to find the animal remains were about 35,000 years old, rather than from the known impact of 13,000 years ago."
Maybe they were exposed 13,000 years ago and got dusted by meteorites?
Wasn't that when the Enterprise went back in time and Captain Kirk made a hand held cannon that used primitive gunpowder and meteor fragments to blast the bad alien beasties?
I reserve the right to think for myself. Others' opinions are optional. Puppy on lap = typos...not illiteracy.
I have a red car, james has a red car... So james car is my car!
Is that these animals were innocent bystanders to the great Time War. This is clearly the result of a Time Lord sending a Dalek hurtling backwards in time. When it landed in the ice age, it tried to do its whole "EXTERMINATE!!" thing, but it's weaponry was on the fritz. "Peppered with meteorite fragments" smacks of being the victim of some malfunctioning Dalek weapon. So as you can clearly see, there is nothing see, so move along...
QED
I got a catholic block.
I'm hoping that this is going to shift the discussion of the last extinction event *away* from the Clovis people finally. This can only be a good thing really as the theory is kind of a relic by now. From what I understand, there weren't even a large number of sites that included evidence of mammoth remains with evidence of human activity together, and a good number of those were certainly opportunistic situations. Mammoths are not exactly easy creatures to take out and the extinction event was unusual in its selectivity.
"A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
Ok, I got nothing.
According to the friendly article, these animals were clearly blasted with space debris, not blasted from space.
Luckily I brought a spare underwear to work today, because I seriously wet my pants reading the headline, thinking some intelligently designed beasts lived in some remote planets, and were blasted into earth after their home planet exploded.
Virtual Betting on Facebook for non-geeks.
Charles Fort and other people have written about this one. Some of the fragments resemble 'bullets'... so this is not the only example of this phenomenon.
So, were they blasted INTO space our OUT BY space objects?
Did they find any Sleestaks, or other creatures from Land of the Lost?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_of_the_Lost_(1974_TV_series)
http://www.landofthelost.com/
Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
Small meteors hit the earth all the time, its a long shot but maybe this animal was just in the wrong place place at the wrong time.
Libertarian Leaning Political Discussion Forum.
The simplest explanation tends to be the best. Tyrannosaurs in F-14's.
The force that blew the Big Bang continues to accelerate.
Raised, burnt surface rings trace the point of entry of high-velocity projectiles; and the punctures are on only one side, consistent with a blast coming from a single direction.
The ratios of different types of atoms in the fragments meant it was most unlikely they had originated on Earth, the team told the AGU meeting. A meteorite would not be my first thought. That would be alien hunters.
These actually aren't earth animals, they're the skeletons from Xenu's spacecraft! Tom Cruise was right all along!
Sorry, part of being a true scientist is not afraid to say you were wrong. By clinging to falsities to advance an agenda, you're no better than any creationist.
Have they checked for jagged double-edged tool marks and surface marking in a mesh pattern?
Yeah, science should totally just abandon making hypotheses about anything controversial, because it might be grounds for anti-science groups to speak out against!
I don't mean to be obnoxious, but that is about as anti-scientific as it gets. Manipulating facts and theories to play politics is pretty much the antithesis of science. Please don't ever suggest something like that again.
I got a catholic block.
Don't you find your desire for censorship/alteration of findings to be a bit ironic?
Are they meteor tracks??? http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&ll=56.453385,-7.750854&spn=1.141412,3.702393&t=h&z=8&om=1/
God sneezed. Intelligent Sneezing, no less!
Too accurate for Sandpeople. Only Imperial Stormtroopers are so precise.
So that's how the Ice Age movies finally end!
Gifts for Geeks - Stuff that really matters!
Why were the scientists surprised? Do they think that no meteorites fell to the Earth at any other time? That seems weird.
This is old news... We've known for how-long now that mammoths had shotguns!
Engineering is the art of compromise.
This is funny, I was just watching a documentary a couple hours ago on the History Channel that discussed this very thing. Though they were concentrating more on Mammoths. One guy used a shotgun for of small specs and shot if at an old arrow head to see if that much power could embed pieces of metal into it, which it didn't. So he concluded the arrowhead he had found with small metal specs had to be caused by a cosmic impact (turned out they were micro-meterites). Also another gentleman was using a highpower magnet over 2 tones of mammoth tusks looking for similiar metal pieces. Was a good show.
to protect those who act against reason?
creationism is not science. it never was. and it never will be. giving them or denying them info does not give them more or less data to suddenly turn into reasonable people. it is merely denying ammunition for a propaganda machine that is not nor ever was interested in the truth
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
is to never admit you are wrong, no matter how much logic data and reason is stacked up against you
creationism is not science. it never was. and it never will be. giving them or denying them info does not give them more or less data to suddenly turn into reasonable people. it is merely denying ammunition for a propaganda machine that is not nor ever was interested in the truth
it is in fact unscientific to manipulate data for competing scientific theories
it does not advance science in any way to give, or deny info to those who were never interested in the scientific process in the first place, and in fact act against science
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
plays a game that censors out the weight of all logic reason and science in what they say. and people who do that, in your mind, are to be afforded the same consideration they don't offer anyone else
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
The earth is only 6,000 years old.
Anybody who studied science in Kansas knows that.
-- http://frobnosticate.com
As a person allowing yourself to be manipulated in the way you treat scientific data is in some way concession, to me at least. Like you say, whatever information science presents, that is outside their world view, will not phase them. Likewise, depriving them of any "ammunition" will not phase them. Why, when discussing science, should I have to tip-toe around with language to be careful I don't give ammunition to someone who is only interested in twisting facts to begin with. Allowing anti-science groups to influence scientific discourse is bad, okay.
I got a catholic block.
I remember a few months back, when the paper on the apparent Younger Dryas meteor event came out. Me and my buddy (I am a geophysicist who studies ice sheet history during the period, and he is a Quaternary geologist) picked it apart pretty well. The lines of evidence they used to correlate the event were not the same for each site. For instance, at some sites they used irridium, others charcoal, and still others Helium-3. The biggest problem with their correlation is that they were using the age of drumlins found in Ontario to date others over 2000 km away. There is no widespread evidence that all of North America burned due a meteorite impact 13,000 years ago. I mean have a look at the distribution of sites. If there truely was an impact that caused widespread destruction across North America, why has there been no published evidence in the central United States. Here in southwestern British Columbia, there is no evidence of any unusual sedimentation during the late Pleistocene. If there was an impact or explosion event that was so intense that it caused the extinction of early people in the Americas, would it not have had measurable material blown globally? I don't recall hearing about any such anomalies in the Greenland or Antarctic cores. It is a crackpot theory at best. One shouldn't discount that one of the main proponents of this hypothesis had only a couple of years ago suggested that a supernova caused the Younger Dryas (an idea that was quickly laughed at).
that you don't care about those who manipulate science
i loathe them
it's important to be impartial in all things... EXCEPT towards those who are consciously and purposely partisan, who aren't concerned with the neutral truth, but are interested in actively skewing of it
when i see a creationist raping the truth, i will get involved to stop the rape
i'm glad your conscience is so wooden that you can see someone rape the truth, and remain uninterested in attempting to stop that
your impartiality, to a smaller degree than you portray, is admirable. but beyond a certain degree, and your deadened uncaring attitude towards creationists as a threat becomes self-defeating
you should care about those who attempt to destroy science, reason, and logic. they are impotent WITHIN the search for truth, yes. but they are not impotent in their desires and attempts to destroy all that underpins the search for truth. in the social structure that supports the search for truth: in the funding of universities and science departments, in the warping of young minds who are needed to refresh those departments, etc.
if you think religius fanatics would not kill or poison science if they could, and pose no threat to you as a scientist, you aren't paying attention to history. reference galileo for starters
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
you know you should educate yourself the slightest bit about a subject matter before injecting yourself into a discussion about it, or you look pretty stupid
then you seem to imply that i'm part of a camp that considers science a religion
(rolls eyes)
shoot first, ask questions later, huh? such as: how baseless a smear should i attempt?
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
I'm a noodlist, a branch of pastafarianism. WWFSMD!? the world was created by the touch of his noodly. and those stupid animals were destroyed for their insolence!
TheTans...TheRested...TheReady...In hot rods of the gods! ...Lorenzo...(studying Dietetics at Seancetology)
...Lorenzo / I'm into kinky crustaceans. I just discovered internet praWn.
Clearly it must be related to the crash landing of the Golgafrincham B Ark.
September 2011: Looking for Cocoa/iOS work in Boston area Cocoa Programmer Quincy, MA
Thank you. That's info that's helpful, and it leads me to ask a question.
I'm genuinely interested in finding out how long it takes to make your average bone-type fossil. I was unable to find any concrete answer about either time to form, or minimum age, of a fossil. Of course, there are several "make your own fossil" type projects that are essentially impressions in clay/rock, but that's not what I want to know.
I know "millions of years" will do the trick, but can it be done in less than 500,000? Less than 100,000? Does anyone have an answer(and hopefully a source?)
The article is a bit of a mess. They scientists wonder if an event 13,000 years ago hit both the tusks of living animals and tusks that had been lying on the surface for 20,000 years. What the article does not address is whether only the 13,000-year-old samples had healed around the particle strikes.
Their they're doing there hair.
Spending a bit too much time on 4chan are we?
Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
If you love knowledge and truth, then you must honor it. Not exploring or publishing certain ideas out of spite is no less anti-science and anti-reason than any creationist notion. --The only difference is that creationists champion ignorance out of foolishness. You are suggesting we do it out of fear and anger. I'm not sure which is worse.
-FL
It's Dust, I tells you!
Something seems a bit funny here - particles that small should slow down pretty quickly (a few hundred yards), even if they come from some kind of an explosion.
As far as your time line of events goes, you can be right or wrong it doesn't matter. But the most animals that are that hairy do not live in warm or hot environments. Also most animals would not wade through deep snow, they would walk on harder (rock/ice) surfaces. Have you ever tired to wade through 3-5 feet of snow? it is a really slow going. Also the mammoth studies have said that the thick fur was good at keeping the mammoths warm in the cold environment. Look at elephants. The ones in colder places have more hair then the ones in warmer places. So wouldn't it seem likely that mammoths did live in colder places? Mammoths are very similar to elephants?
This is by far the greatest title I've ever read on Slashdot. I'm not even going to read the article because I'm sure it's not going to live up to the title.
Ooookay, then. How do you explain the 10,000 year old frozen baby mammoth carcass found in Siberia a few years ago, then? Also, how did they cross the land bridge into the Americas without being able to tolerate cold during the Ice Ages?
Maybe the plasma arcs that supposedly explain meteor craters better than kinetic impact are somehow responsible...
This is classic crackpottery.
The Crackpot wants to claim that they are really a Revolutionary, that they have investigated the weak edges of science and found a fundamental problem, that the conventional wisdom is wrong, and that they hold the solution. A solution that up-ends the existing theories. They will claim that the reason they and they alone were able to discover this solution is because the Science Establishment is too set in their ways, too dogmatic, and simply refuses to question or investigate those areas where the science is weak and various mysteries inadequately explained. They will claim that the only reason that they are given the label "Crackpot" is because the Science Establishment is afraid of their ideas. The Science Establishment hates Revolutionaries, you see, and will not accept the scientific evidence the Revolutionary brings to bear no matter what.
Of course this is nonsense. Real Revolutions happen and up-end the "Establishment", they're just uncommon. Because in most cases, the existing science is by and large good and well established and supported by mountains of evidence. Einstein was a Revolutionary and General Relativity was a Revolution. His theory completely changed how we view the nature of the universe, and one of our most basic assumptions -- that Time itself is constant across all frames of reference. Quantum Mechanics was a huge Revolution in Science, again reversing some of our most basic assumptions about the universe. Yet these Revolutions are now the Scientific Establishment, by the simple virtue of the experimental evidence these Revolutions brought to bear, and now these theories are also supported by mountains of evidence, equally difficult to up-end.
So what then is the difference between the Crackpot and the Revolutionary? Well a major difference is that the true Revolutionary explains the new, explains the experimental data that the old theory cannot, but just as importantly also explains the experimental data that the old theory explained. Relativity didn't prove that Newtonian physics was wrong, it simply showed it to be an approximation for common conditions. It didn't suddenly come out and say "No, actually you can approximate gravitational attraction using the cube root of the distance between masses!" because anyone can drop an object and track its position and see that, in fact, Newton's Laws are correct within the precision of any available measuring device. Quantum Mechanics didn't prove that simpler models of atoms were completely flawed and false -- because all that chemistry you did in high school works just fine using those simpler models. QM only explains what the simpler model cannot.
The Crackpot's theory, on the other hand, cannot explain the existing evidence. The Crackpot, desperate to prove that they are Revolutionaries, then must try to deny the existing evidence, and deny the large successes of the existing theory at explaining the existing evidence.
This is the case with the Electric Universe shlock our "unwelcome celebrity" champions -- it actually tries to replace Newtonian (and relativistic) mechanics with electricity and plasma. Not just show that some of the difficult to explain parts of the universe (dark energy etc) are better explained with electricity, but that extremely easy and well explained parts of the universe (like meteor impacts, planetary motion) are also explained. It's this attempt to shoe-horn their theory into places it doesn't belong, to up-end science that needs no up-ending, that reveals the Crackpot.
Of course that's the point where most people stop reading. The Crackpot th
The enemies of Democracy are
The meteorite obviously exploded with so much force that its fragments traveled faster than light.
Duh.
> Eight tusks and a bison skull all show signs of having being blasted with iron-nickel
> fragments, typical meteorite material. Raised, burnt surface rings trace the point of
> entry of high-velocity projectiles; and the punctures are on only one side, consistent
> with a blast coming from a single direction.
The scientists continue their discussion:
Scientist 1: Then the bison wrote, "I don't think I can survive much longer, bleeding badly, it's getting cold, so cold, agguh guh guh guh guhhhh"
Scientist 2: If he was dying, the bison wouldn't take the time to write out "ahh guh guh guh guh".
Scientist 1: Look, I'm only reading what it says.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
"But the most animals that are that hairy do not live in warm or hot environments."
Do you have any specific examples to cite?
Right off hand, I can't think of any larger creatures with hairy coverings that live in arctic and sub-arctic conditions.
But I can think of at least one species with a very hairy mane that lives in very warm climates - the African Lion.
Been there, Done that, Sold the t-shirt to the next idiot in line
In college physics, they had a common name for ion-transporting twistey filaments in the lab- Birkeland Currents. [I think he was an early Nobel Prize winner.] Not sure why they didn't use the term in this article... Maybe they are still trying to get their minds around the sheer immensity of the ones they photographed between the sun and earth.
Heh. I had no idea what 4chan was until now. I'm surprised you didn't say Imagefap.
Mark
I respond to evidence. But only if you engage me on it.
"A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
The reason is that I've reviewed the criticism, and my conclusion is that the debate is legitimate. There are truly two world views here. Although the numbers of supporters are not equally distributed, it's a legitimate debate between some laboratory plasma physicists and a large number of astrophysicists. I've reviewed the arguments presented by Tim Thompson; I've reviewed some of the older catastrophist materials between Carl Sagan and Velikovsky, and I've read some of Ginenthal; I've reviewed the Electric Universe materials by Don Scott and Wallace Thornhill; I've gone through the "mythological" evidence by Dwardu Cardona and Rens van der Sluis with an open mind; and I've paid very close attention to the accurate predictions that Wallace Thornhill has made, and almost more importantly, the responses to those predictions. Taken as a whole, EU Theory survives the criticism fully intact. In fact, it even presents many unresolved issues for the mainstream.
The problem is that the arguments are just far too complicated for most people to understand, and so it remains under the radar as far as the public is concerned. Many people have made the unfortunate mistake of assuming that this low visibility is a reflection upon the legitimacy of the arguments themselves. Of the few who are trained to understand astrophysical issues, the education they received clearly favored one particular cosmology. And that explains why the issue is so contentious. This is in fact a debate over whether or not their mathematics is matching the decades of laboratory research that has gone into plasma physics.
If a group of plasma physicists is arguing, for instance, that magnetic reconnection is in fact just a re-statement of exploding double layers or that there are major issues with how magnetism is treated within astrophysics, then those are *very* serious allegations that deserve a dignified response, and if possible, experimental validation one way or another. The fact that the plasma physics portion of EU Theory claims are just being ignored though for the sole reason that it is the EU Theorists who are saying them says much about the way in which astrophysicists deal with these sorts of issues.
One thing is clear to me from my readings: conventional astrophysicists completely and consistently underestimate the legitimacy of the EU Theory arguments and evidence. Many don't even know enough about it to realize that they're siding with mathematical models against lab results.
Actually, the issue with conventional astrophysics today is that certain interpretations for observations are being completely ignored. If you look, for instance, at the Baltis Vallis on Venus, you observe a sinuous rille that spans 4,200 miles and that moves both up and down with the terrain, in apparant defiance of gravity. From http://www.thunderbolts.info/tpod/2005/arch05/050203venusriver.htm:
Well, if we're to avoid allowing assumptions into our conclusions, then another completely legitimate explanation is that the sinuous rille was created by an electrical plasma, as we appear to also see occurring on Io and Enceladus. And we see the same exact thing with the Colorado River and the Kaibab Upwarp: rivers do not tend to punch straigh
"A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
If it's science, then either you sign on to the relevant methods, tools, techniques etc of the field you are interested in, or you start by admitting that you want to use a somewhat (or very) different set.
From the post of yours that I'm replying to, I can't tell; however, you do seem to be asking for acceptance of the ideas you are so obviously promoting on the basis of their (traditional) scientific legitimacy. As I have to start somewhere, the rest of my comment will assume this is the case. I've paid very close attention to the accurate predictions that Wallace Thornhill has made, and almost more importantly, the responses to those predictions. Taken as a whole, EU Theory survives the criticism fully intact. Right here, in the first paragraph, your programme runs into trouble.
First, there's no such thing as 'EU Theory', in the standard, scientific meaning of 'Theory' (think of 'Theory of General Relativity', for example).
Second, within the scientific paradigm of physics (plasma physics, astrophysics, etc), Wallace Thornhill did not make any predictions, much less any accurate predictions!
Let's move on. Of the few who are trained to understand astrophysical issues [...] May one infer from this that you, yourself, feel that you are one of the few?
May one ask what training you have received, pertinent to understanding 'astrophysical issues'? The fact that the plasma physics portion of EU Theory claims are just being ignored though for the sole reason that it is the EU Theorists who are saying them I've not read enough of your other Slashdot comments to be able to conclude if you're joking, are quite serious, or something else entirely.
Staying within the scientific paradigm of physics (plasma physics, astrophysics, etc), I'm aware of almost no such 'plasma physics portion of EU Theory claims' published in relevant, peer-reviewed scientific journals in the last decade or so (other than one or two papers by A. Peratt). If these so-called claims have (plasma physics, space science, astrophysics) scientific merit, why don't the authors write up papers and get them published in peer-reviewed journals? Goodness, there are even ways to get ideas 'published', with 'review', with a much lower standard than the relevant journals in the field - why haven't there been any? One thing is clear to me from my readings: conventional astrophysicists completely and consistently underestimate the legitimacy of the EU Theory arguments and evidence. Many don't even know enough about it to realize that they're siding with mathematical models against lab results. This will be the last quote, even though I'm barely a tenth of the way through your reply, it's already abundantly clear I made an incorrect assumption earlier.
Which textbooks, review papers, etc - by 'conventional astrophysicists' - did you read (that lead you to such a conclusion)?
Which 'lab results' (published where) did you read? To what extent did you check for the use of 'mathematical models' in the presentation of those 'lab results'?
In which lab was a test done, on a 2 x 10^30 kg mass of ~75% H, ~24% He, ~2% all other elements, of the legitimacy of 'EU Theory arguments and evidence' vs mainstream astrophysics?
But perhaps I have seriously misunderstood what you wrote. Would you be kind enough to state, as clearly as you can, the extent to which the cause/ideas/whatever you are promoting should (could?) be judged using the standard methods of science (of the fields of plasma physics, space science, or astrophysics)?
Well, surely, if you cover your eyes with your hands, you will not see it. The ironic thing perhaps is that you actually read what an infinite improbability drive was when you were younger and you're now apparently trying to use it.
I would be wary of relying upon arguments that depend upon a lack of awareness within the public, for if large numbers of people finally learn about the prediction, and you are still arguing that he made no prediction, people will consider your approach to be a bit "unique". I fail to believe that the public will adopt your more nuanced definition of what a prediction is (whatever that is).
But more than that, I also wonder what your purpose is in denying these things rather than arguing against them? It appears to be less of an attempt to understand your surroundings than an attempt to *define* your surroundings.
"A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
I was hoping, but not expecting, better than this from you, pln2bz. First, there's no such thing as 'EU Theory', in the standard, scientific meaning of 'Theory' (think of 'Theory of General Relativity', for example). Well, surely, if you cover your eyes with your hands, you will not see it. So, uncover my eyes (and those of anyone else reading this)
Just one request: please make sure that these papers have been cited (referenced) by the other papers you will be quoting, whenever you invoke 'EU Theory'.
Alternatively, be honest enough to admit that there is no such scientific theory. Second, within the scientific paradigm of physics (plasma physics, astrophysics, etc), Wallace Thornhill did not make any predictions, much less any accurate predictions! I would be wary of relying upon arguments that depend upon a lack of awareness within the public, for if large numbers of people finally learn about the prediction, and you are still arguing that he made no prediction, people will consider your approach to be a bit "unique". I fail to believe that the public will adopt your more nuanced definition of what a prediction is (whatever that is). Here's where I expected more of you.
As my comment - that you are quoting - clearly states ("From the post of yours that I'm replying to, I can't tell; however, you do seem to be asking for acceptance of the ideas you are so obviously promoting on the basis of their (traditional) scientific legitimacy. As I have to start somewhere, the rest of my comment will assume this is the case."), I was working within the assumption that you were presenting a case within the paradigm of the relevant parts of modern science !
Now that I know - thanks for the clarification - that that is not the paradigm you are working within, I am looking forward to you explaining - to me and any other readers of this comment - just what paradigm you are working within. But more than that, I also wonder what your purpose is in denying these things rather than arguing against them? It appears to be less of an attempt to understand your surroundings than an attempt to *define* your surroundings. Glad you asked; I do hope you will be willing to listen to the answer.
Communication requires a certain minimum in terms of common understanding.
If I wish to communicate with you - and any others who happen along with comments - I need to make sure that the relevant parts of such a common understanding are in place. Otherwise, we will just be talking past each other for quite a while before realising it.
So, in this regard, I have achieved something very important: whatever case it is that you are so keen on presenting, I must not assume that you intend it to be taken seriously as one that has scientific merit.
If, at any time, you do intend something you assert to be taken seriously (scientifically), then please say so, and I (and others) may engage in science-based discourse with you.
Back to the topic
There is no longer a useful conversation here. You've allowed the conversation to become so vague that it no longer possesses any meaning. I've attempted to bring up specific facts along the way, but you've repeatedly refused to deal with a single one of them.
"A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
Sorry you feel that way ... I was looking forward to your answers (as I said, I've been reading your other comment in SD, and it seems you have been much more, shall we say, expressive, and willing to engage in dialogue with others ... even when the topics have been highly abstract ...).
BTW, would you mind re-stating the 'specific facts' that you think you have brought up? Just the top five will do. I'm interested to understand how you could possibly have concluded that I 'refused to deal with a single one of them'.
In fact, if you read my other SD comments, you'll see that I have been independently investigating pln2bz's 429 (as of today) SD comments, from Day 2 of my SD existence.
FWIW (for what it's worth), I have found a number of replies to pln2bz's SD comments helpful and informative, not least because some were followed by further pln2bz's SD comments (and so on). In particular, I have formed the (provisional, tentative) opinion that pln2bz:
a) does not often respond to questions about material in his (her?) SD comments;
b) writes (deliberately?) using words which have sometimes quite idiosyncratic meanings, but doesn't spell these personal meanings out, thus making communication unnecessarily difficult;
c) (deliberately?) mis-states, mis-interprets, or misunderstands many so-called facts, observational or experimental results;
d) is confused about, or (worse) deliberately mis-construes, the nature of physics (plasma physics, astrophysics, space science,
FWIW(2): anyone reading this comment is free to assume anything they wish about any connection between APODNereid and any user/member/participant in any other internet discussion forum, whether with the handle/name/avatar of Nereid or not. Myself, I wish what I write here to be read solely within the context of the SD comment strings in which they appear or reference.
FWIW(3): my current goal, wrt (with regard to) pln2bz is to establish clear guidelines on what she (he?) considers legitimate frameworks within which the EU ideas he (she?) promotes may be judged, assessed, tested, evaluated, etc. To the extent that I have formed any opinion, it seems that, as a hypothesis, 'there is only one true word, and that is the word of {Thornhill, Scott, insert other names here}' is not falsified by anything pln2bz has written in SD (that I've read so far). pln2bz, if you're reading this, I'd appreciate it if you could point me to comments you've written in SD which do, in fact, falsify this hypothesis.
To address the last: pln2bz (and anyone else reading this), the Anonymous Coward (AC) whose post I am replying to is not APODNereid. Of course, you should not take me (or AC) at my word, but undertake your own investigation.
Somewhat out of order:
"I wish what I write here to be read solely within the context of the SD comment strings in which they appear or reference."
Thanks for your noting this. You'll see from at least one of pln2bz's comments today (or yesterday, depends on where you are) that he (I shall follow your convention and call pln2bz 'he') did not choose to respect my clearly expressed wishes in this matter. Worse, and apparently quite uncharacteristically, he leveled some unsubstantiated, pejorative charges at me, and chose not to reply (despite being directly called on them).
"a) does not often respond to questions about material in his (her?) SD comments;"
I disagree. Until this very recent deluge of SD chatter, I have observed that it was extremely rare for pln2bz to drop any argument, or even allow a single disparaging or otherwise disagreeable comment to go uncontested.
From my reading of earlier SD comments, by pln2bz, I now see that this is so.
All the more unusual then that he has apparently changed his approach - off the top of my head, I'd guess there are at least a dozen, quite serious, questions, comments or challenges from me that he has not replied to.
Perhaps the most remarkable - though not particularly surprising - is his apparent reluctance to state the logically consistent paradigm within which he himself judges/assesses/etc ideas, facts, etc in the fields of astronomy and space. Naively, I'd've expected - based on my reading (to date) of his SD comments - that he'd be only too pleased to reply, in well over 1000 words. After all, a common theme in his comments is that those who question 'EU Theory' have not taken the trouble to read the evidence presented, and, even if they have, they are not willing to assess it in any way other than one from the universe of what might be called 'approaches consistent with modern science'.
"c) (deliberately?) mis-states, mis-interprets, or misunderstands many so-called facts, observational or experimental results;"
I believe his mis-statements and mis-interpretations of these things are naive misunderstanding, and not malicious.
I continue to find it amazing that the mis-understanding and mis-interpretation (deliberate or not) is so widespread!
But perhaps I shouldn't be; it seems that pln2bz relies on what we might call tertiary sources - summaries on TB webpages, which are themselves based on (HST, ESO, ESA, NASA, etc) PRs, which are in turn based (to varying degrees) on papers published in relevant peer-reviewed journals. Can you recall him ever having referenced a primary source?
"d) is confused about, or (worse) deliberately mis-construes, the nature of physics (plasma physics, astrophysics, space science, ...), as fields of science"
Although it is clear that he uses a system for gaining knowledge about Nature that is different from what most people use, it is critical to understand that everyone, including him, must share this system in order to reach his conclusions. He knows this as well as you know that he must share your system of knowledge (which you call science; an act he regards as pretentious and wrong) to reach your conclusions about Nature. This is the true fight.
This rings true, based on what I've read so far of his SD comments.
In some ways it's good news - there is the possibility that an agreement on 'the rules of engagement' can be reached, and thus that there is a framework within which fruitful dialogue can take place.
Most of his posts on Slashdot treat his readership as if they already had his system (thus his "confidence in his readers' ability") by appealing to common sense ab