aharvey
New member
Clete said:By the way, in case you were wondering why I haven't posted anything else on this thread, its because after having read the chapter on trench formation (all of it), I sort of figured out that aharvey's "objections/questions" were contrived at best and down right dishonest at worst. The answers to his questions are intuitive if you've read the material. Either that, or he is simply trying to interpret the theory within a plate-tectonic paradigm, which wouldn't surprise me.
In any case, it isn't worth the effort (not to mention the time) it would take to debate it with him. If the information in the book (which I can barely bring myself to believe he's actually read) doesn't answer his questions, nothing will or even could. If you want badly enough not to see something, you won't see it.
Resting in Him,
Clete
These consecutive posts are priceless, Clete, coming from someone who lept late into this fray vigorously defending something he hadn't even read!!!Clete said:Oh that has to mean a lot coming from someone who definitely has read any of the material. :chuckle:
I rather suspect your reasons for not continuing to post are different from what you here claim, Clete, though I of course cannot prove it. They might be rather similar to the reasons that Peggy feigned surprise that there were problems associated with my attempts to email them despite the fact that everyone I know who has tried that address from anywhere in the world has had similar problems, yourself included.
Your "intuitive answers" are ciphers, Clete. They seem to exist only because that entire document is set up specifically to make it as difficult as possible to study it from certain critically important perspectives (to scale, for one example, and three-dimensionally, for another). Furthermore, you seem to be assuming that I've presented my entire analysis, when nothing could be further from the truth. As I stated, er, in the beginning, I have found it unsatisfactory to post too complex a topic in one big chunk, and so decided to lay out my analyses and questions in bits and pieces, starting with the sequence of events. (Unfortunately, this hasn't worked too well either as it seems that not even Walt Brown's most ardent supporters have actually read his work well enough to discuss it!)
So Clete, if you do in fact think you have intuitive answers to my questions that aren't dismantled by the analyses I've already posted, my guess is that they have been dismantled in the analyses I've done but haven't yet posted. And before you get too bent out of shape by all this, just remember this post and this post of yours. In the first post you tried to tell me that there is a real difference between the compressive forces on the granite at the bottom of the hydroplate and, um, the compressive forces on the granite at the bottom of the hydroplate. In the second post, many posts into our exchange, you still seem to have no idea that The Central Assumption of the hydroplate theory is that a 3/4 mile thick layer of water (the hydroshell) covered the earth, itself covered by a completely sealed 10-mile thick layer of granite (the hydroplate). So I don't think you can safely assume you're the only clear thinker about this stuff.