fansworth working on his fusor again....
Posted: Wed Feb 06, 2013 11:06 pm
a discussion forum for Polywell fusion
https://talk-polywell.org/bb/
Oh wow! really?happyjack27 wrote:ah, but it says he goes to church regularly.
so clearly he doesn't have the mind for it. ah well.
yes.Starboard wrote:Oh wow! really?happyjack27 wrote:ah, but it says he goes to church regularly.
so clearly he doesn't have the mind for it. ah well.
happyjack27 wrote:ah, but it says he goes to church regularly.
so clearly he doesn't have the mind for it. ah well.
touche. very good counter-example.Diogenes wrote:happyjack27 wrote:ah, but it says he goes to church regularly.
so clearly he doesn't have the mind for it. ah well.
Isaac Newton was a religious nut.
I mean a religious NUT!
happyjack27 wrote:touche. very good counter-example.Diogenes wrote:happyjack27 wrote:ah, but it says he goes to church regularly.
so clearly he doesn't have the mind for it. ah well.
Isaac Newton was a religious nut.
I mean a religious NUT!
nonetheless, activity and growth in the anterior cingulate cortex and amigdyala tend to be mutually exclusive. in fact, the amigdyla has a tendency to hijack the higher cognitive functions.
happyjack27 wrote:touche. very good counter-example.Diogenes wrote:happyjack27 wrote:ah, but it says he goes to church regularly.
so clearly he doesn't have the mind for it. ah well.
Isaac Newton was a religious nut.
I mean a religious NUT!
nonetheless, activity and growth in the anterior cingulate cortex and amigdyala tend to be mutually exclusive. in fact, the amigdyla has a tendency to hijack the higher cognitive functions.
that's not how statistics work. the prominent example cited is an anomaly. i could cite another prominent example, too: einstein. but the examples are empirical evidence just as much as the scientific evidence that went into the papers i read are based on empirical evidence. the evidence that went into the papers is more numerous and more discursive, but on the other hand, those examples are large deviations. in any case, they are both true. as always there is simply more to be discovered about neuroanatomy and how the different parts of our brain interact.Diogenes wrote:happyjack27 wrote:touche. very good counter-example.
nonetheless, activity and growth in the anterior cingulate cortex and amigdyala tend to be mutually exclusive. in fact, the amigdyla has a tendency to hijack the higher cognitive functions.
I would suggest your theory is holed by the prominent example cited.
Well, you're drawing a conclusion for a specific instance based on statistics, which seems similarly foolish. There is evidence for that specific case in question which refutes your statistics-based contention.happyjack27 wrote:that's not how statistics work.
there is no evidence for that specific case in question, and evidence does not refute.dnavas wrote:Well, you're drawing a conclusion for a specific instance based on statistics, which seems similarly foolish. There is evidence for that specific case in question which refutes your statistics-based contention.happyjack27 wrote:that's not how statistics work.
This is a very silly line of argument to have begun in the first place, imho.
JoeP wrote:Funny that the original Farnsworth was a Mormon IIRC.
Guess he was IQ impeded as well according to happyjack and didn't have the "mind for it" to develop anything successfully. Ah well.