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On Mon, 06 Oct 2003 21:10:25 GMT, Walter Maxwell wrote:
Richard C, you suggest we step up to the bench and perform your experiment that will prove you are correct. Hi Walt, This is a misrepresentation of my work. I responded here that the appearance of poor criticism suggests that my work is bulletproof (among a spectrum of equal likelihoods) and my statement is a critique of that shoddy work being offered as rebut to my data. Further, I make no pretense that such an experiment will prove me correct and I have offered on more than one occasion that someone with care equal to mine could easily find data that refutes mine. I have no illusions to being "correct" and have freely admitted that everything I do contains error. However, I do, by training and experience, exhibit those bounds of accuracy where others simply caterwaul on that they need no lessons in the matter and further would never "change their mind." Now, if this appears to be backtracking, it is evident only to those who will never attempt anything at the bench and have no capacity to weigh their own sources of error - either of judgement or demonstrable skill. In conclusion, it is certainly an illusion to imagine that anything is ever concluded. The best I can achieve is a confluence of thought with one or several in educating rather exotic issues that lie outside of the experience of many. There is nothing inherently common about this, and is of interest to only those who aspire to accuracy, a very limited audience. The larger point that is germane to the whole of the audience is found in the conduct of analysis, its support or its refutation. The scientific community does not brook simple nay-saying and the shotgun approach to cut-and-paste arguments offered as rebuttal. I have described methods and results. My methods can be challenged, my results can be shown irreproducible. I have offered tangible, testable propositions, means, and results to which absolutely nothing of equal merit has been put forward to provide a meaningful assault. It is in that context that the appearance of a bulletproof presentation has been suggested by me. :-) The irony of my comments lies in the simple observation that this only takes two resistors and a hank of line for one such test. The magnitude of effort, as evidenced by those simple constraints suggests that my critics are seriously skill impaired to offer honest testing. I am content to stand above such midgets even if I have to stoop so as to not make it so overwhelmingly and embarrassingly obvious. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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