Assume a spherical planet. OK an ablate spheroid. OK a ...
Now assume Lord Kelvin is talking bollocks. Just because you invent "really cold, bordering on quite nippy" doesn't mean you can overlook things like half lives and red shift. If Lord Kelvin lived now I suspect he might have other conclusions - he evaluated the evidence available at the time.
I was deliberately provocative and I'm glad I was. I've got far better responses as a result. I never thought to mention Kelvin and you have dived in and filled in that gap.
The article in SA was and is absolute bollocks. Bear in mind that your and my definition of bollocks may be dissimilar and I am not being disrespectful. The article is very short and does not provide working. It is of its time and I suspect the working is available somewhere else. It gives us a short glimpse of popular science writing 150 odd years ago.
You might want to take another look at the usernames involved.
I'm not claiming that "an ablate spheroid" was correct usage. I'm pointing out that the response, "to 'ablate' is to erode", is a non sequitur. It is relevant neither to its parent comment nor to the comment in which it appears.
>I'm not claiming that "an ablate spheroid" was correct usage. I'm pointing out that the response, "to 'ablate' is to erode", is a non sequitur.
Which is still a wrong thing to say and a bad argument.
You appear to be arguing something like "I couldn't mean ablate, since it doesn't fit the context, so why mention it". Well, whether you meant it or not, you did write it, and you could very well have done it because you thought it meant "oblate".
This doesn't make the correction a "non sequitur" in any way. On the contrary, it's very relevant: it provides the actual meaning of the term used (whether it was used as a typo or because you didn't know the correct meaning).
And that's too many words for a non-issue. "Ablate" was the wrong word for your intended meaning, somebody pointed it while also explaining what it means. End of story.
> You appear to be arguing something like "I couldn't mean ablate, since it doesn't fit the context, so why mention it". Well, whether you meant it or not, you did write it, and you could very well have done it because you thought it meant "oblate".
This is a pretty stunning thing to write after I've already had to point out to someone else that I didn't write the sentence in question. Did you read my comment before responding to it?
Now consider this sentence:
> "Ablate" was the wrong word for your intended meaning
If I respond "but this makes no sense; to 'wrong' is to unfairly cause harm", would that be a good argument? Would it constitute any evidence of any kind about your usage of the word "wrong"?
Obviously not, but it's exactly the same as the original argument I responded to, "to 'ablate' is to erode".
I do admit that I hit o instead of a, I have no idea why because I am familiar with the difference between the two words, which are not remotely related in meaning.
I'm gerdesj who actually committed the original mistake and not the other person who dived in.
Now assume Lord Kelvin is talking bollocks. Just because you invent "really cold, bordering on quite nippy" doesn't mean you can overlook things like half lives and red shift. If Lord Kelvin lived now I suspect he might have other conclusions - he evaluated the evidence available at the time.
I was deliberately provocative and I'm glad I was. I've got far better responses as a result. I never thought to mention Kelvin and you have dived in and filled in that gap.
The article in SA was and is absolute bollocks. Bear in mind that your and my definition of bollocks may be dissimilar and I am not being disrespectful. The article is very short and does not provide working. It is of its time and I suspect the working is available somewhere else. It gives us a short glimpse of popular science writing 150 odd years ago.