ban-all-sheds said:
So how would you describe my analogies? Relevant, or not?
I believe (but without double-checking, so I might be wrong), that I've described most of your analogies on this topic. I doubt that they can be described as all relevant or all irrelevant. I don't feel inclined to try, because I think your attempt to get me to is just a means of starting an argument.
OK - in this instance, do you think that the car was as safe as it could be?
It doesn't matter whether or not I think it was; the whole point about
this car is that the owner has made a
specific statement in the
specific context of
this accident, and that I have implicitly challenged the credibility of
his statement.
OK - please tell us what more they could have done?
I can but repeat my previous answer to this very question, viz:
Softus said:
Finding out those things is the purpose of modelling and testing. Unforeseen, and yet foreseeable, accidents are the hallmark of inadequate effort on both counts.
ban-all-sheds said:
Models can only be built according to the state of knowledge at the time. Do you believe either that the car has failed the way that it did in testing or modelling...
I have no opinion about that.
...or that they left something out of the model that they knew about?
Yeeees; don't think that I can't see where you're going with this. By asking only two questions, you goad me into answers that open the path to challenging my opinion on the basis of your opinion. Well, whilst I'll tell you now that I'm not interested in that challenge, because neither of us has any new facts at the moment, but the answer to this question is that I don't know whether ir not they left something out of the modelling exercise that they know about. If they did, then clearly a whole new realm of culpability opens up.
For what it's worth, I also think that you have a narrow-minded view of modelling. Using your thinking, space exploration, as a project, would either never have got off the ground, or would have spectacularly crashed and burned.
Do you think it reasonable to say that he was talking absolute b*llocks, and call him criminally crass without considering the possibility that the only thing that went wrong was the driver?
No, which is exactly why I considered the possibilty before making my assertion.
If you considered the possibility, did you reject it?
No; not wholly. But then I don't share your insistance on everything being utterly black and white. It's a grey world, and dissecting everything with logic doesn't always work.
If so, on what basis did you decide that the driver did not make a mistake?
I haven't made that decision, so I can't answer that question. And before you stampede triumphantly towards your next assertion, being that I must have decided it in order to [partly] reject driver error, I would remind you that I'm not the one who made the decision to issue a public statement, after the accident, asserting that everything had been done in order to make the car as safe as was possible.
What you're failing to see is that many enquiries, thanks to the power of independence, are able to see failings that those close to an implementation are, by human nature, unable to see.
If that turns out to have been the failing, then culpability remains with the owner, because,
in this example, he could have sought such an independant viewpoint before the accident.
This is only one example of a way in which the owner might have failed to do everything that was possible, so don't think that me presenting it here gives you a way of starting a whole new realm of arguing about that one specific point, because I will choose not to be drawn into it.
...it's probably another refusal to accept reality, or that you could be wrong.
I'm perfectly ready to find out that I'm wrong. The time will come when the enquiry is complete, and, if I'm wrong, then, as per every other occasion, I'll readily post an acknowledgement of that.
How certain are you that you are correct?
Do you feel lucky, punk?
The reality of which you write, however, is your opinion, which, no matter how reasoned and/or reasonable, is demonstrably not the same as reality or truth.
And the reality of which you write is also your opinion, which, no matter how reasoned and/or reasonable, is demonstrably
not the same as reality or truth. So where does that get us?
I don't know why you have this expectation that you have to persuade me to share your opinion, or me to persuade you to share mine.
As I've said, many times, I am waiting for more facts to emerge, but in the meantime, I continue to believe that the owner made a defensive statement that is lacking in credibility. If you don't wish to believe the same thing as me, then that's just fine.
Or that if I crashed one it would mean that the maker would have been wrong to say that it was as safe as it could possibly be?
That you find it relevant to persist with the fanciful hypothesis of you crashing a plane is an illuminating window into the basis of a large part of your reasoning on this topic.
It is not a fanciful hypothesis
If you don't already fly, then it is a hypothesis; if you have no intention to learn to fly, then it is fanciful. I presumed, albeit presumptuously, then you don't fly and don't intend to.
...it is, as I repeatedly try to get you to understand, an example of how something can truthfully be described as being as safe as possible, or prepared to the highest standards, and yet still fail.
You can save your effort in getting me to understand, but I did understand, from the outset. I agree that there are things that exist today that fit your model of something failing; what I continue to assert is that
this dragster isn't one of them.
Is what lies at the heart of all this some ridiculous notion of yours that nothing can ever be described as "as safe as it can possibly be" because future improvements might be discovered?
This notion, that you attribute to me, is rather wide-ranging, and I've persistently pointed out that I'm talking about this car, this owner, this driver, and this accident.
OK - for this car, this owner and this accident (I've left out "this driver" because you have considered, and rejected
[no I haven't] the possibility that he made an error), what improvements that will be discovered in the future should have been made to the car beforehand?
Ask me when they're discovered and I'll tell you.
It isn't my car, and I'm not the one who openly claimed that it was made as safe as was possible.
Sneering jibe, eh?
Softus said:
I have my opinion, and I stated it clearly and concisely. Whether you're capable of understanding it is a separate issue
The old '
two wrongs make a right' justification:
Aw, Mum - he did it first! I wondered if that would come out of your toolbox.
You appear to need reminding that this isn't a court of law in which evidence is heard, not is it a forum in which you control whether or not people keep or break silence.
I never said I controlled it - I just made a suggestion. But regarding evidence - do you have some that you will not reveal because you are not obliged to, or do you in fact have no evidence?
Whatever motive force you use to deploy new ways of introducing pointless arguements could have been used to power that dragster far beyond the current land speed record. I'll say it again - I'm waiting for more facts to emerge. You, and the owner, really should do the same.