On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 3:27 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:
> ... > I suggest you should stop fantasizing about this. Rossi did not take apart > the wall and install secret equipment that he turned on and then turned off > during the calibration. He did not find a way to send so much power through > an ordinary electric cord that he melted steel and ceramic. That is not > possible. You can dismiss it from your mind. The electric cord would have > burned. The other gadgets such as the computers plugged into that circuit > would have been roached. > > There is value in pursuing reductio ad absurda when they engage one of the strongest arguments that the demonstration is valid: That the power input could not conceivably have produced the radiation wavelengths observed.

