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"Dwight Stewart" wrote in message
ink.net... "Kim W5TIT" wrote: (snip) Fact is, though, you did open yourself up with the statement, "Few people today (especially boys and men) have not learned code, or at least played around with it, at some point in their lives." (snip) Is that sentence what this is all about, Kim (and Dee)? If so, lets forget about debate rules and discuss how to write instead. I wrote a paragraph which contained a lead, supposition or hypothesis, and a conclusion. The "fact" mentioned in the lead of that paragraph is in the conclusion of that paragraph, not in any single sentence leading up to that conclusion. The sentence quoted above is supposition leading to the conclusion. The conclusion of that paragraph, and the "fact" mentioned in the lead of that paragraph, is, "...most adults today are familiar enough with code to know whether they have any real interest in it." Based on what I wrote in that paragraph, and in subsequent messages, I do believe that conclusion to be fact. And the conclusion of this message is, if that sentence is indeed the root Dee's objection, we've spent several days arguing over two entirely different things - that sentence in Dee's case and the overall conclusion in my case. Dwight Stewart (W5NET) http://www.qsl.net/w5net/ Well, I am actually *supposing* that is what it is that Dee is basing the major part of the discussion on. Dee? (PS--it doesn't matter a whoot for me, I think I'm not so driven by statements as I am concepts). Kim W5TIT |
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