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On Mon, 2 May 2005 17:41:41 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote: Richard, I can see you adopt the same attitude as I do towards questions on this newsgroup which begin with "I have heard that . . . . ". Hardly a reliable start to a question. Hi Reggie, Reliability in questions? You've got the cart before the horse. If "I have heard that" was an introduction to a statement, or development of an idea; yes, certainly, a poor beginning. But as an introduction to a question, it is apparent that the questioner is begging contradiction or confirmation for "I have heard that." In my particular instance, I supported the generality by offering a new perspective and confirmation. Mike appreciated it, and that was enough apparently as the remainder of discussion wandered the field kicking over other stones. One gets the impression the questioner is unlikely to be able to understand the answer and tailors the answer to suit. Hardly uncommon, and successive correspondence removes any doubt or resolves the enquiry. This is the point of posting afterall. The only one posting threads I've seen are my own. ;-) Looking back over my career, I have never(?) taken anything out of a book (Terman, etc) at face value. The number of occasions on which errors and uncertainties of one sort or another have come to light has justified the time and effort expended in checking. Anybody who quotes Terman as from a Bible has only ever read him but must have never actually used him in anger. I mention Terman only as an example but hasten to add, in my opinion, he is amongst the most reliable of popular technical authors. I have only his first edition produced in the middle of WW2. The utility of references is manifold. Some use them as rubber crutches for their xeroxed theories. I've noted this on more than one occasion when Optics is so thoroughly pimped to serve impoverished notions. However, even in this, and other instances, such citations offer the general readership a bibliography and some insight into the depth of discussion to be found in those references. When all I see are endless lines of copied equations, I am not impressed. However, when I see logical development proceeding out of the topic at hand, the original author would bear closer examination. I have several of the cited works mentioned here. Too many are as dry as bone, and hardly useful beyond the examples they laboriously wade through the math to cover. Others are indeed treasures of first principles. What this reduces to, is to lean heavily upon the cliche of "Old Wives' Tales" to whitewash a thread is in itself reducing the discussion to voyeurism and is neither an original nor useful insight. Kelvin would hardly be impressed at such rhetoric that evades specifically challenging loose references. The difference is Atlantic, we are less impressed by the arch comments that typically inhabit "a letter to the editors of the Times." If you care to polish up your style, I would suggest researching the better pieces written before the age of TV (or radio for that matter). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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