On Wed, Dec 7, 2011 at 11:30 AM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:

> Mary Yugo <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>> I suspect you will take wild notions like mine more seriously if much
>> more time passes without any absolutely definitive determination of Rossi's
>> veracity.
>>
>
> I consider the Oct. 6 test definitive.
>

Many capable scientists and engineers do not agree.  The measurement method
was questionable and unverified and the run was way too short.  We've gone
over this before and I guess we have to agree to disagree.


> The chance of fraud is so low I do not take that seriously. It is no more
> likely than a supernatural event. Neither you nor any other skeptic has
> suggested any viable reason why this demonstration was not definitive. You
> have never come up with a method of committing fraud. If you could suggest
> a method, you would have done so by now.
>

Well, we did suggest several methods but you don't agree.  That's OK too.
And I always have to remind you that there are probably many potential
methods to cheat we may not have thought of.



> You are asking us to believe in fraud with a trace of evidence for it. Not
> a trace!
>

Behaving like a scammer and resisting all reasonable and safe suggestions
to prove that the device is real is definitely evidence suggesting a scam.
I agree it isn't proof.


> You are a true believer clinging to an absurd hypothesis that is contrary
> to the laws of physics.
>

Perhaps in your view but I find myself in good company.  Your company
includes George Hants, Sterling Allan, Hank Mills and Craig Brown.  Not so
great.  And yes, that's not conclusive evidence for a scam either but
everything they have supported thus far has, for the most part, been
delusions and scams.

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