16-10-2024, 07:22 AM
Ok, so you're saying both of the sub-sections turned out to be faulty, the worst possible scenario.
It's hard to logically fault find with more than one fault in a system, hence your difficulties at the start.
It worries me a bit that you have identified both as faulty in the end.
I suppose if they were just picked at random out of a pile of potential goers but were both not viable in final judgement then that explains it.
It's hard to logically fault find with more than one fault in a system, hence your difficulties at the start.
It worries me a bit that you have identified both as faulty in the end.
I suppose if they were just picked at random out of a pile of potential goers but were both not viable in final judgement then that explains it.
It's not the least charm of a theory that it is refutable. The hundred-times-refuted theory of "free will" owes its persistence to this charm alone; some one is always appearing who feels himself strong enough to refute it - Friedrich Nietzsche