Ender wrote:DarkStar, I don't have time to go into detail, but trust me, you're wrong.


Moderator: Vympel
Wow, you payed attention to a full rebuttle, well, it's not really a rebuttle, but still, you replied to it, go you. Ofcourse you would understand him if you read the rest of the thread, instead of just repeating your arguement over and over again no matter how many times it's proven wrong and when ever someone points out one of your fallacys you just say their doing the same like a 1st grader. Jesus even Babs the zombie could respond and learn from what others said and did.DarkStar wrote:Ender wrote:DarkStar, I don't have time to go into detail, but trust me, you're wrong.Wow. Hella-argument you got there, Ender.
I will not alter my arguments unless they are proven to be logically or factually in error, and I have already told you this. (You say I repeat things... well, duh... you keep ignoring what I say.)anarchistbunny wrote: Wow, you payed attention to a full rebuttle, well, it's not really a rebuttle, but still, you replied to it, go you. Ofcourse you would understand him if you read the rest of the thread, instead of just repeating your arguement over and over again no matter how many times it's proven wrong and when ever someone points out one of your fallacys you just say their doing the same like a 1st grader. Jesus even Babs the zombie could respond and learn from what others said and did.
Benefit of the doubt, that you don't have the proper material to ascertain lightspeed travel in Star Wars. Here I will go through the quickest simplest way to determine.DarkStar wrote:Someone over at ASVS also made the assertion of "unseen missing time". How long was it? Days? Weeks? Years? Can we insert "unseen missing time" into Star Wars, too? Oh, the possibilities...Spanky The Dolphin wrote:It has to do with cutting out action that is not nessesarily needed on the show/film.
obviously in TMP, they didn't want to show the Enterprise traveling across the Sol System for several hours, so they just showed it passing Jupiter/Saturn/Planet Whatever after only a few seconds of them traveling, for the sake of the viewers.
Same basic idea could be possibly occuring during "Farpoint". They decide not to show the E-D exiting then entering warp. After all, the show isn't in realtime, isn't it.
Now I'm going to bed, because it's 1:00 AM and I'm fucking tired.
I don't have one. Hell, I didn't even bother to read what you posted. But since you have been proven wrong every other time you posted, I figured I'd just play the odds.DarkStar wrote:Ender wrote:DarkStar, I don't have time to go into detail, but trust me, you're wrong.Wow. Hella-argument you got there, Ender.
Contrary to the canon description of the SW galaxy as "modest-sized". In the Local Group of 40 galaxies, even excluding the dwarfs and anything else below 10,000 light-years across, the average galaxy size of the remaining 13 is 36,500 light years (an estimate which holds for larger galaxies within 20 million light years).DG_Cal_Wright wrote: In the Black Fleet Crisis trilogy Lando says that scientists have found the galaxy to be 120,000 light years across. That is officially EU source.
I haven't needed to. My original arguments stands just fine. All I've had to do is point out the flaws in reasoning and canon in the posts of my opponents.Master of Ossus wrote:DarkStar, have you brought up a single new point since your opening argument in this debate?
Really? What scene? Got any screenshots?Anyway, your statement that we have always seen warp-flashes when we see ships go into warp is incorrect. In "By Inferno's Light" we see the Defiant go to warp without a warp flash.
Riiight. Even if you are correct about one single warp entry event, that does not prove a lie... it would prove an error, probably related to the fact that there are 1.2 billion hours of Trek to work with. Of course, reasoning means little to you, so you would naturally assume and emphasize your notion that I have engaged in an outright lie, a la Poe.You are lying.
Now that is a lie. See the difference, there? Hmm... no, you probably don't.You have failed to properly respond to any of Lord Poe's original points,
I've never argued on the basis of dialogue over visuals. My argument is that we accept the visuals for what they are. After all, EaF was the first time we saw the new warp effects... how did anyone figure out what they were showing? Dialogue. Did they show warp flight without warp stars? Yep.and you appear to have no argument unless we fall for the "Dialogue over Visuals" fallacy.
Ah, so you've been listening to the warsie whining and not bothering to try to figure out the facts for yourself.Ender wrote:I don't have one. Hell, I didn't even bother to read what you posted. But since you have been proven wrong every other time you posted, I figured I'd just play the odds.DarkStar wrote:Ender wrote:DarkStar, I don't have time to go into detail, but trust me, you're wrong.Wow. Hella-argument you got there, Ender.
its a different universe, galaxies could be considerably larger there, ever thought of that?
Contrary to the canon description of the SW galaxy as "modest-sized". In the Local Group of 40 galaxies, even excluding the dwarfs and anything else below 10,000 light-years across, the average galaxy size of the remaining 13 is 36,500 light years (an estimate which holds for larger galaxies within 20 million light years).
ever thought that when they say 'outer rim', they mean the outer rim of the old republic, not the entire galaxy. there can be more than one meaning to a sentence you knowSome argue that the use of phrases like "halfway across the galaxy" in TPM, "outer rim" in several movies, and Han's comment that he'd been from one side of the galaxy to the other implies that the Empire probably controls a huge fraction of the galaxy. However, this is highly unlikely, given what is known of the galaxy. For instance, the planet Kamino was referred to as being "beyond the outer rim", but the map in the Jedi library clearly zoomed in to an area very close to the core, meaning that "outer rim" cannot refer to the outermost rings of the galaxy. It should be noted that I am not being unfair here . . . I apply similar reasoning to Pike's comment to the Talosians about being from "the other end of this galaxy".
No, this is the wrong way. Your point would have been better made if you had measured the turning radius and then described the speed at which the ship should have passed.Setesh wrote:For those who haven't seen it I posted this to the newsgroup thread on the same topic
Alright let's settle this the easy way.
Your point is no different than that of Ossus, who claimed that science overrides canon in reference to warp visuals without warp stars, and fails just as miserably.Setesh wrote:I'd love to see him try this. I don't mention the warp stars at all and showing a visual merely makes my point more obvious.
Master of Ossus wrote:I tried something like that already when I told him about turning radii, but he ignored me and repeated his original points without modification. Good luck, guys. I don't think we can defeat his tactic of disregarding all relevent posts while either concentrating on minutiae taken out of context or focusing entirely on his original argument.
Psst! Hey, fuckwits! How many times do you have to be told that this is science fiction, and is to be regarded on that basis? If we do not accept the canon facts, we might as well stop arguing, since nobody's going to reach any other planet at FTL speeds.Setesh wrote:I'm not expecting much except a good laugh out of his post. After the 3rd time he ignored me rather than answer my questions I decided not to expect much. Still I know he'll point out that my distance figure is off and he will be right. I even admitted it wasn't accurate. Its far to small. That's the distance that should be there at a Warp 1 turn aka c. The Ent was going a lot faster than warp 1 before the turn to escape Q. I'm just waiting to see hm try to rationalize away a point based on common sense.
No, it is a galaxy far, far away.A Big Flying Fish wrote:its a different universe, galaxies could be considerably larger there, ever thought of that?
Contrary to the canon description of the SW galaxy as "modest-sized". In the Local Group of 40 galaxies, even excluding the dwarfs and anything else below 10,000 light-years across, the average galaxy size of the remaining 13 is 36,500 light years (an estimate which holds for larger galaxies within 20 million light years).
My point exactly.ever thought that when they say 'outer rim', they mean the outer rim of the old republic, not the entire galaxy. there can be more than one meaning to a sentence you knowSome argue that the use of phrases like "halfway across the galaxy" in TPM, "outer rim" in several movies, and Han's comment that he'd been from one side of the galaxy to the other implies that the Empire probably controls a huge fraction of the galaxy. However, this is highly unlikely, given what is known of the galaxy. For instance, the planet Kamino was referred to as being "beyond the outer rim", but the map in the Jedi library clearly zoomed in to an area very close to the core, meaning that "outer rim" cannot refer to the outermost rings of the galaxy. It should be noted that I am not being unfair here . . . I apply similar reasoning to Pike's comment to the Talosians about being from "the other end of this galaxy".
You still haven't, since I sure as hell didn't say that.Setesh wrote: Wow, I've never seen someone say that my argument is faulty because it proves him wrong before.
Ha!He loves to ignore little Canon facts ('No left no right') (the ONLY canon warp turns occur around stars in slingshot manuvers), since they don't support his little notion.
Dude, we're already seeing superluminal flight by human beings, and we see it represented as a ship passing by quickly while making a whoosh sound. What the hell is wrong with you?Attempt to use a basic acceleration physics (aka common sense) and he crows 'suspention of disbelief' rather than try and prove me wrong.
I wonder if he realizes that 'Suspension' only goes so far, they bend the laws pretty baddly in ST, now DS claims they can breack them like a ming vase.
I could be a complete asshole and point out that "12 parsecs south of the Riche Maze" that Obi-Wan pointed to, and the location of Kamino that the monitor zoomed in on, would make the entire area shown by the zoomed out map something like 100 parsecs wide.SirNitram wrote:Oh my, the 'Not A Galactic Empire After All' nonsense again? Please, anyone who saw AOTC could plainly see that the Republic didn't just control the Galaxy, but several 'captured' Galactic formations nearby, similar to the Magellenic Clouds captured by our own Milky Way.