I find this to be an odd quote from someone that does "research" and is touted as one of the experts....Did he try to "deny" it or did he challenge the assertions and then quickly correct a mistake once he was convinved. Truthfully- I find it refreshing when "experts" can admit they made a mistake and update their work.....I mean, isnt that what experts do...ask questions, challenge assumptions....and sometimes they are wrong and need to adjust their work. Updating an error should be applauded, not ridiculed.
Hello,
This is a fair question, and to be honest, my playing a "look he made a fundamental error" game feels a bit childish for my own liking. However, you have to understand that these debates with Ross about David's study have played out over years now, and have involved hundreds of time consuming posts on multiple forums. We have generally afforded Ross the courtesy of debating him as though he is someone with a legitimate viewpoint that has to be worked through and properly examined. On this basis genuine progress has been made, and I do think the community is better educated about the issues as a result.
However, you (meaning me) do get a bit worn down by it all. Ross frequently becomes overtly abusive, and some deep flaws in his arguments are extremely difficult to tease out in a clear understandable manner because his confident pronouncements and copious production of complicated looking diagrams are often sufficient to sow the seeds of doubt in readers who are struggling to get their heads around it.
In this milieu, when he produces one of his trademark diagrams that is clearly wrong, then the temptation to point that out is obviously strong. This is particularly so when it is obvious that this diagram is a prelude some some new tangent he is going to go off on in an attempt to discredit a presentation on deep stops I recently gave using similar diagrams to illustrate some basic principles.
The fact that he made a major error in a very basic definition (of supersaturation) is undeniable. You would not know it now though because he changes the diagram on his website which means it updates on this forum without a change in the edit time / date stamp of the post itself. Luckily I kept a copy of the original before it changed (see my post 854).
You ask "did he try to deny it" and the answer is unequivocally
yes. His original diagram appeared in post 823. In post 824 I pointed out the error. He changed his diagram on his website to remove the error and it updated on this forum without a change in time and date of his post. Then, in post 829 he quoted my post about the error and wrote "Really? David seems to think it is OK now". Anyone reading the thread, seeing no evidence of the error on his diagram, and looking at the sequence of posts and their dates / times would therefore be very confused about what I was making a fuss about and would have thought his denial was legitimate.
I put it to you that this was not an example of a discussant allowing persuasion to change their mind and legitimately acknowledging that change (which I completely agree is laudable). Indeed, I believe it was disingenuous in the extreme, and we have seen this sort of thing before in these debates. Hence I gave in to the temptation to point it all out.
Simon M