OneWhiteEye wrote:I can expound on that, just not right now.
No need, looks like SnowCrash covered it all above.
| Welcome | |
|---|---|
| |
Welcome! Our vision is to provide a home to sincere 9/11 researchers free from biased moderation and abusive tirades from other members. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest, which only gives you access to view the discussions. New registration has been suspended. |
OneWhiteEye wrote:I can expound on that, just not right now.
Heretic76 wrote:Oystein
The only "proof" that Suquami was onboard the aircraft the hit the tower is a government statement to that effect. You may recall that the first passenger manifests released did not contain his name.
Thus it appears that you rely upon updated/edited/falsified passenger manifests for your 'proof', and my standard of proof might be higher than yours.
Have you an opinion about how or why they could find identification papers and small parts of human bodies at WTC, but no Flight Data Recorder there?
OneWhiteEye wrote:And, folks, not only is this not JREF, Oystein isn't JREF either. It's hard not to be touchy when discussing this subject from opposing viewpoints, but let's do try to avoid tarring with the broad brush. Take each post and each point on its own, not in the context of some larger historical battle between 'us' and 'them'. Because, ultimately, there is no us and them, there is only each of us.
For most of you, I'm probably a lot closer to them than you! Or neither...
manxman wrote:The OP will reply just as soon as you leave your jref attituude at the door, sander has been 10 times as polite as i would of been, so i diidnt infest the thread with it, you see thats how we roll here.
Heretic76 wrote:And I'm quite sure that by the Rules of Logic, that if a thesis is advanced, and that thesis contains multiple parts making up the whole, if any one of those parts is proved invalid, the entire thesis fails.
I should perhaps emphasize that it is not necessary for all of the evidence to stand up, given the nature of the argument. Some arguments are, as we say, "only as strong as the weakest link." These are deductive arguments, in which each step in the argument depends on the truth of the previous step. If a single premise is found to be false, the argument fails. However, the argument for official complicity in 9/11 is a cumulative argument. This kind of argument is a general argument consisting of several particular arguments that are independent from each other. As such, each particular argument provides support for all the others.
Rather than being like a chain, a cumulative argument is more like a cable composed of many strands. Each strand strengthens the cable. But if there are many strands, the cable can still hold a lot of weight even if some of them unravel. As the reader will see, there are many strands in the argument for official complicity in 9/11 summarized in this book. If the purported evidence on which some of these are based turns out to be unreliable, that would not necessarily undermine the overall argument. This cumulative argument would then simply be supported by fewer strands. And some of the strands are such that, if the evidence on which they are based is confirmed, the case could be supported by one or two of them. [43]
43
I emphasize this point because some polemicists, when confronted by a book whose
conclusion they do not like, seek to undermine this conclusion by focusing on the few
points that they believe can be most easily discredited. That tactic, assuming that good
evidence is really presented against those points, is valid with regard to a deductive
argument. In relation to a cumulative argument, however, it is tactic useful only to those
concerned with something other than truth.
Heretic76 wrote:Snow
I admire your even-handed treatment of all theories advanced, both the official theory and others.
And it's quite likely I'm guilty of oversimplification here.
But I wonder if it is also a well known reasoning error to accept at face value the statements of a person or entity notorious for its mendacity?
Heretic76 wrote:...
How does the ordinary man reconcile the findings of the 911 Commission with the statements of several of its members? How many strands can we count?
Oystein wrote:Heretic76 wrote:...
How does the ordinary man reconcile the findings of the 911 Commission with the statements of several of its members? How many strands can we count?
Can you please name at least one member of the 911 Commission who has said anything that can be reasonably construed as him expressing doubts about any of the key findings, namely
- that four airliners were hijacked and piloted by terrorists on a suicide mission
- that their plane crashes caused all of the death and destruction at GZ, the Pentagon, and Shanksville
- that these terrorists were affiliated with Osama Bin Laden's Al Qaida network
Thanks.
Bob Graham: "If by conspiracy you mean, more than one person involved, yes, there was more than one person and there was some ... collaboration of efforts among agencies and the administration to keep information out of the public's hands."
Bob Kerrey: "It's a problem... it's a 30-year-old conspiracy"
Jeremy Rothe-Kushel: "No.. I'm talking about 9/11"
Bob Kerrey: "That's what I'm talking about"
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests