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Instead, you resort to a sort of ad hominem.

You appealed to authority, it's pretty legitimate to point out that it isn't actually an authority on the subject.

If the information provided is so poor, you should easily be able to disprove the claims.

As previously pointed out, only 10% of gold is used in industry.




> Instead, you resort to a sort of ad hominem.

> You appealed to authority, it's pretty legitimate to point out that it isn't actually an authority on the subject.

> If the information provided is so poor, you should easily be able to disprove the claims.

> As previously pointed out, only 10% of gold is used in industry.

I'm guessing you are referring to an appeal to false authority, because the acquisition of all knowledge presumably originates from an authority. If you are claiming that geology.com has presented false information, then you need to demonstrate this. Stating that it makes money from ads is not a claim against the provided information. You have inserted an arbitrarily derived claim.

Your statement of percent of gold makes no sense. From the World Gold Council[1]:

> Total above ground stocks (end-2017)

> Total above ground stocks: 190,040 tonnes

> Jewellery: 90,718 tonnes, 47.7% > Private investment: 40,035 tonnes, 21.1% > Official sector: 32,575 tonnes, 17.1% > Other: 26,711 tonnes, 14.1% > Below ground reserves: 54,000 tonnes

Further, if we take the total amount of above ground stocks and multiply it by the current gold price of around $1500, we find that the current markets value the total gold at over $10 trillion. If 90% of gold mined isn't in use, why is it valued at $9 trillion? And if the remaining 10% of gold has such little usefulness, why choose such an expensive mineral?

And all of this supports my original point that gold has uses.

[1] https://www.gold.org/about-gold/gold-supply/gold-mining/how-...




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