James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness

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Online Steve Howsley

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #77 on: July 26, 2018, 06:13:58 AM »
I'd keep asking you about what you think that level of precision would be, but as you say, you don't care.  It's the most important underlying question to the whole kerfluffle...and you simply don't care. But you want to argue about it anyway.

Beautifully put.

Nailed it.

Offline Bill Chapman

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #78 on: July 26, 2018, 08:04:08 AM »
As the graphic you've posted shows, the difference between the line from the overpass to the TSBD and one from the overpass to the fence corner is a very small angle, just by cursory inspection. The precise measurement of the angle is kinda beside the point; it doesn't affect the argument one way or the other. It just puts a particular number and unit to a small value. I didn't do so initially because I didn't figure that anyone would require Wopner-at-4:30-grade measurements. In fact, no one else but you seems to have needed them.

The degree of precision isn't arbitrary at all. It's based on the units that people actually use every day when determining and communicating direction where more precise mechanical means aren't available. It stands to reason that these units are determined by the minimum differences in direction that humans can easily discern on their own. One divides a circle into twelve equal sections, the other divides that circle into sixteen. If you wish to differ, that's OK, but you gotta do better than what you've managed so far.

And you still haven't answered my question, since you seem not to like what I use as a benchmark for precision. I'll ask again:

Now, given the real world conditions of Dealey Plaza on Nov 11, 1963, how accurate do you think the TP witnesses audio localization capabilities were at the time?

"In fact, no one else but you seems to have needed them"

GeeItsFunToTrollHereJohnny is way out in left field* as usual. He's crackers, Jack. Take hm out to the ballgame and don't forget his peanuts and popcorn. But really, we don't care if he ever gets back.

In that vein, one can point to anywhere in left field and it's still gonna be left field

Take Me Out to the Ballgame
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Take_Me_Out_to_the_Ball_Game#Lyrics

Thanks to Jack Norworth for the 1908 version, which is out of copyright.
My little tale is inspired by his lyrics.

A Modern Tale of How to Strike Out the Side
by Bill Chapman with a great big shout-out to Jack Norworth

   Before the start of the game (an away game played in Texas against the "Dallas Usual Suspects') the  manager of the Little League 'Stepford Sheep Dippers' tells pipsqueak 9 yo left fielder Little Johnny I: "Little Johnny I, notice that the wind is blowing out toward left field today. That includes all of left field, not just the exact spots I'll be pointing at to shift you to"

"But Mr. Chapman", pleads little Johnny I, "my daddy told me that the earth is flat so there can't be any wind.. and that means wind is a hoax and the the government is just pretending."

Manager Chapman replies "Little Johnny I, you're weird."


 ;)

* From the Way Out In Left Field Society: "The phrase "way out in left field" has evolved to mean an eccentric, odd, misguided or peculiar statement or act. Although the origin of the phrase has been challenged and debated over the years, the most logical and realistic explanation comes from an extinct baseball park called West Side Grounds that the Chicago Cubs called home from 1893 to 1915. As legend has it, a mental hospital called the Neuropsychiatric Institute was located directly behind the left field wall. The Institute housed mental patients who could be heard making strange and bizarre comments within listening distance of players and fans. Thus, if someone said that you were "way out in left field," the person was questioning your sanity and comparing you with a mental patient"[16][17]
-Wikipedia

Take Me Out to the Ball Game_1908
« Last Edit: July 28, 2018, 08:19:11 PM by Bill Chapman »

Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #79 on: July 26, 2018, 05:21:05 PM »
I answered that in reply #47 of this thread:

The question I asked is about that: how precise are human beings with direction? This question can be easily answered by noting that "human-measurable" scales regarding direction don't get any more precise than a 16 point compass rose. So direction in this case is only accurate to within +/- 11 degrees.

I really don't think it's exactly +/-11 degrees, but it's pretty close to that, otherwise we'd need (and have) more compass points than N, SW, ENE, etc.  To put it another way, if you and someone else were standing at the edge of a downtown, and there was a loud, unexpected shot, would you expect your companion to say, "Wow, that came from 49 degrees East of North"? Or would he just point in the general direction as best he could? 

You're just restating the claim.  Is there any research that shows that humans can only distinguish 11 degrees or did you just pull that out of your rear orifice?

Quote
It comes down to how precise you think that someone could be about the direction of the origin of a shot in Dealey Plaza. I'd keep asking you about what you think that level of precision would be, but as you say, you don't care.  It's the most important underlying question to the whole kerfluffle...and you simply don't care. But you want to argue about it anyway.

This is really pointless.  Would it have changed your point in any way to use the more accurate phrase "nearly the same direction"?  "Same" is a binary proposition.  Something is either the same or it is not the same.  You're exaggerating the language in order to try to make your argument more compelling.  Just like you're equating the entire grassy knoll area with one corner of the retaining wall in order to make your "same" difference as small as possible.  Yes, it matters.

It's impossible to have a meaningful conversation about the evidence if people won't even be honest and accurate about what the evidence is.

Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #80 on: July 26, 2018, 05:23:31 PM »
A Modern Tale of How to Strike Out the Side
by Bill Chapman with a great big shout-out to Jack Norworth

Nice story Bill.  You're well on your way to replacing Walt as chief fabricator and thread hijacker.

Online Mitch Todd

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #81 on: July 28, 2018, 12:41:31 AM »
You're just restating the claim.  Is there any research that shows that humans can only distinguish 11 degrees or did you just pull that out of your rear orifice?

This is really pointless.  Would it have changed your point in any way to use the more accurate phrase "nearly the same direction"?  "Same" is a binary proposition.  Something is either the same or it is not the same.  You're exaggerating the language in order to try to make your argument more compelling.  Just like you're equating the entire grassy knoll area with one corner of the retaining wall in order to make your "same" difference as small as possible.  Yes, it matters.

It's impossible to have a meaningful conversation about the evidence if people won't even be honest and accurate about what the evidence is.

It's pointless because you "don't care" about the question that's fundamental to the problem. And you haven't really even thought through what the word "same" means. I used it in the the sense of "indistinguishable", or, as M-W says: "corresponding so closely as to be indistinguishable." The trick is, "same" becomes  dependent on what can be distinguished. That is why I wasted a lot of words giving you example of a measuring device accurate to +/-1 cm, and you wasted a lot of time ignoring them. It can't really distinguish between objects that differ less than 2cm in length no matter what number you think you get. In short, "Same" has fuzzy, indistinct edges. The question in this case is how fuzzy those edges are. To wit (and I'll word it a bit differently this time): given the environment of Dealey Plaza 12:30 PM on Nov 22, 1963, how accurate would anyone be at locating a sound like a gunshot? That's the question you "don't care" about, and it's central to the discussion at hand. But you still want to argue about it.



 

Offline Bill Chapman

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #82 on: July 28, 2018, 08:31:57 PM »
Nice story Bill.  You're well on your way to replacing Walt as chief fabricator and thread hijacker.

'chief fabricator'
Nah, just artistic license

'thread hijacker'
Your failure to comprehend my 'left field' analogy is your burden

And it's one, two, three strikes, yer out!
You're benched, Little Johnny I
« Last Edit: July 28, 2018, 08:35:55 PM by Bill Chapman »

Offline Bill Chapman

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Re: James Leon Simmons.... Overpass Witness
« Reply #83 on: July 28, 2018, 09:06:57 PM »
What is your source for what humans can easily discern on their own?  Particularly your 11 degrees claim.  You still haven't answered that.

I don't care.  I'm merely pointing out that 11 degrees off is not the "same direction".  Nor is 3 degrees off.  Same direction means zero degrees.

There's that bar of yours again. To fully satisfy your claim, an earwitness downrange from the TSBD would have to point directly at the SN window. Got it.

In the meantime, may a thousand camels f*rt in your general direction

« Last Edit: July 28, 2018, 09:16:17 PM by Bill Chapman »