Connor MacLeod wrote:Proof please. Considering that in Foundation both personal AND capital scale "nuclear blasts" are witnessed (and the effects most certainly ARE witnessed.) is proof enough. Moreover, we know that in "Foundation" that the blaster that struck Mallow's shield induced "atomic disruption" that tore air molecules apart - an ability that is attributed to capital scale weapons as well (such as in Foundation and Empire and proven in quotes you yourself provided.)
Do you mean "Foundation" the book? First of the original trilogy? Where is that capital scale "nuclear blast" witnessed. Where in the quotes I provided is atomic disruption mentioned as an element of capital scale weapons?
1) The psychohistorians? No, here there is no violence at all, other than the arrest of Seldon and Gaal Dornick.
2) The encyclopedists? There is no violence in all this part, other than Hardin's takeover, who mentions siege weapons with "bombs into it", while Dorwin describes quite a devastating incident at Gamma Andromeda. Hardin even goes to great lengths to avoid attacking the Anacreontians.
3) The mayors? No. The Anacreontian fleet never attacked Terminus. There is the description of the Wienis' atom blasts, but little else. The only weapon other than that Wienis used to end his life is the "needle gun" used to hunt the Nyakbird.
4) The traders? Again, not. Askone had nothing but "holdovers" of the Empire and they rejected nucleic science. Sport cruisers, actually. And the Foundation is involved here only with two traders. One does think that he can deal with the Askonian ships in a whim, but there is no violence used in this part of the story. Nothing at all.
5) The merchant princes? Nothing that I can see. The loss of three trader ships in Korellian territory.
Sutt wrote:He said methodically, "In a moment. You see, three ships lost in the same sector in the same year can't be accident, and nuclear power can be conquered only by more nuclear power. The question automatically arises: if Korell has nuclear weapons, where is it getting them?"
Vague threats made by the Commdora.
Commdora wrote:"You wouldn't dare, you little pug-dog. My father would pulverize your toy nation to meteoric dust. In fact, he might do it in any case, if I told him you were treating with these barbarians."
Onum Barr describing the fate of Siwenna in very vague terms and saying that "half a planet would be wiped out" before damaging the smallest power stations. More very vague descriptions made by the Commdora (hardly qualified).
Commdora wrote:"But one – just one – can blast that Foundation into stinking rubble. Just one! One, to sweep their little pygmy boats out of space."
The Dark Nebula finds a Imperial warship that is a lot bigger, but there is no combat description. Vague descriptions of Mallow about a war that mentions half a mile deep caves under enemy bombardment, but he can't be considered knowledgeable in this topic, when the Foundation doesn't seem to have fought a serious war in about a century (and it actually avoided fighting against Korell).
So, where is that fucking description of capital scale beam weapons?
You obviously have no concept of the effects we should witness with the large-scale vaporization of a human body, much less "atomic disintegration":
You obviously didn't bother to read my whole post before writing this. Quoting myself.
As you can see in this three descriptions, there is no residue left. The target is "blown into nothingness", "disappears" or "is not" after impact. The fact that unshielded and unprotected civilians survive being next to the destruction of a human torso is proof enough against vaporization or some energy. Non interactive particles (like neutrinos) seem the clearest option to explain where the mass goes to
So, yes I do have some idea about the effects produced by the vaporization of a human body or parts of it.
Emphasis mine. Note that while vaporizing/"disintegrating"'s someone's head is not hte same as disintegrating the whoel body, a simple google search will reveal that the human head accounts for about 8-10% of the mass of the human body - more than enough to produce noticable and in fact harmful side effects. Put succintly we see NONE of the above in the references, even though such effects should be blatantly obivous to the people involved.
Something I am perfectly aware of and is the reason for proposing the theory of an in-built safety system.
Furthermore, there are other examples in the foundation novels of people being hit by such weapons (the Mule forces Bayta to kill Ebling Mis in Foundation and Empire, and IIRC Cleon II is also killed by his gardner in a similar fashion and in neither case are the requisite side effects even remotely apparent.) I might ALSO point out that in the case of the Mis killing, a substantially greater portion of the body is "disintegrated" than just the head, and the side effects described above would be even MORE apparent.
Would you, please, stop mentioning this? I am aware of it. However, there are at least two other different kinds of blasters.
The "imploder blasters" used in Prelude and Forward the Foundation.
Forward the Foundation wrote:"A blaster, despite its name, does not 'blast' in the proper sense of the term. It vaporizes and blows out an interior and - if anything - it causes an implosion. There's a soft sighing sound, leaving what appears to be a 'blasted' object".
Such a weapon was used against Cleon II by the way.
And the microwave laser blaster used by Trevize.
Foundation and Earth wrote:"The dog must have felt the initial surge of heat, and made the smallest motion as though it were about to leap. And then it exploded, as a portion of its blood an cellular contents vaporized".
The pre imperial tyrannians used this kind of weapons as well, so it is not a matter of Foundation improved technology, but a matter of choice, as clearly the "eraser" and "imploder" kinds are far safer for close range combat.
Clearly the weapons are not purely DET weapons, even if you don't understand the underlying facts.
See above.
Note the reference to "force" - many of the descriptions for blasters refer to "nuclear forcecs" or something absurd to that effect, which definitely tends to put the weapon into the technobabble category.
Ok. Repeating yet again: I
know that there is technobabble involved and that the phenomena can't be explained neither as a chain reaction or pure DET. The point is that the behaviour of this weapons is different from that of the few know examples of capital scale weapons.
And yet, Bayta is not bathed in a massive cloud of high temperature plasma, nor any radiation flux.. hell she's not even burned by the massive steam cloud that should result. Nice try.
That is the sound of the point going over your head. I will just repeat it once again: blasters can be of different kinds and purely DET weapons are possible. There is no relation whatsoever between the hand weapons chosen by their safety advantages and
Which if true only proves it is a non-DET weapon, like a phaser. Which in turn casts substantial doubt on the capital scale weapons being purely DET.
1) We don't know if the technobabble part of the weapon adds energy to the end result (considering that there is no chain reaction, it is unlikely), so it might be a DET weapon with a technobabble in-built safety.
2) Observed effects of capital scale weapons are far different.
3) Description of capital scale weapons suggests DET.
Fine then, you tell me where all these side effects magically disappear to, since you're insisting that they're "safely" disposed of by some unknown and ridiculous mechnaism (and keeping in mind that bullshit like "alternate dimensions" didn't work for phasers.) Oh yes, and lets not forget Occam's Razor, since that makes the liklihood of them being DET even less so.
Neutrinos is the most clear option. The one I mentioned above, so there is no need for weird "alternate dimensions". It is obvious that there is an unknown mechanism that transforms energy and matter in some kind of non interactive particle. There is no support for the idea of this mechanism being a material-dependant chain reaction, as the mass not directly affected by the blaster beam doesn't disappear.
A similarity which is irrelevant, except as proof that you'll take ANY offhand bit of dialogue and treat it as canon fact.
When did description become dialogue? The quote is description of the events made by the narrator, not any character and my interpretation is supported by dialogue.
Which is supposed to mean what in this case exactly? Oh wait, I know, we're pulling the "Evil Warsies are pulling a mean double standard on our side" excuse to cover up one's own ignorance! Gee, I haven't seen that before...
Just a convenient example of a different source using Bel Riose's description for an event that matches my interpretation.
Meaning you don't fucking know what you're talking about, so you're attempting to bluff through by over literal interpretation of dialogue and semantics nitpicks. The "definition" matters fuck-all in this case - its the OBSERVED EFFECTS (or lack thereof) that matter in proving whether or not its DET. Which, ,as I have demonstrated, ,they clearly are not (and no you don't get to ignore the side effects by claiming some ludicrous "safety feature", since that would require violating CoE and/or symmetry - again read the phaser descriptions.)
Observed effects:
There were two noiseless flares that pinpointed space as two of the tiny gnats shriveled in atomic disintegration, and the rest were gone.
1) Weapons hit.
2) Targeted ships explode in a "noiseless flare" that completely destroys them.
Now, please tell me where in this description do you find something that fits the "non-DET" bill.
And I'm goign to point otu that STarships are not inert objects and thus not the best sources for making weapons calcs off of (since they tend to be mostly empty space, have fuel supplies and other possible volatiles, etc.)
Very true. My only considerations here are that there is little else for making calculations and that Foundationverse ships are never mentioned to carry any kind of volatile fuel.