WHAT are you thinking?
WHAT are you thinking?
RightIdea said:
But now to just say it was a recommendation?
I wouldn't call the phrase "limit is extremely tight" as a recommendation.
Shimei said:
If the word count between participants was the other way around, would people even notice or care?
defcon said:
To RightIdea: I noticed a couple rounds ago you asked somebody for something he was smoking. Was that request ever taken literally?
You crack me up. The rules explicitly say: “recommended.”
“The debate will last for ten rounds. The
recommended maximum word limit for the average post is 6,000 words…”
I realize you like to demonstrate that you’re able to criticize your own side, and that’s admirable. But it’s rather bizarre to suggest that this is just “now” being called a recommendation when the rules say: “recommended maximum word limit.”
KNIGHT said:
Also please do not waste valuable space commenting on why a question wasn't responded to if that question was not in your official question list. The 6,000 word limit is extremely tight in a debate of this complexity therefore we want to save as much space as possible for actual content.
Knight’s statement after round three was an encouragement to stay focused on the debate, and it was
not a repeal of one of the rules. And by recommendation, if there is not provocation, it is reasonable to take the limit as a recommendation, meaning that there is
a few percentage points of leeway. If there is provocation, then
the recommendation margin would increase proportionately to the provocation.
To Shimei: the answer is: no.
To defcon: yes, we would know, based on past behavior. In Battle Royale VII, the back and forth interaction was very similar to BR X. And when Zakath went AWOL, the response from the moderator, Knight, and from me was to wait, and wait, and wait… to give Zakath a chance to post! There was no bias to rule against Zakath because TOL is a Christian site. Likewise, it should be obvious, that Sam could post late, or long, or copy and paste in his lengthy argument on Isaiah written by someone else, and the bottom line for TOL and me is that we want the best argument Sam can muster. So, the answer is no, of course we would not care if Sam went 10% over the limit, or 20% for that matter. My goal is to debate the issue, and win or lose on the merits.
Knight from just after the ninth round said:
NOTE ABOUT WORD COUNT
Much has been made in the grandstands and in the coliseum about the recommended 6,000 word count limit. The 6,000 word count limit is a recommended limit (as stated in the rules) and the spirit of the rule is to keep the posts at a reasonable word length. The bottom line is TOL is looking for a substantive debate about God's foreknowledge not a trivial debate about word counts.
The substantive qualities of this debate take preeminence over that quantitate elements of this debate.
And finally, again to RightIdea: I don’t know WHAT you’re thinking?? Really? What are you thinking?
-Bob