I, much to you and indeed all revisionist's irritation, point out the flaws in how you debate the evidence.Archie wrote: ↑Wed Oct 02, 2024 1:22 pmNessie, you need to do better than this if you want to post here. Your arguments are too generic. The purpose of this forum is to debate the evidence. You're not doing that.Nessie wrote: ↑Wed Oct 02, 2024 10:48 am The logical fallacy of argument from incredulity applies to corpses on pyres and not Santa, because the pyres are well within the realms of what is possible, based on examples of other pyres and what will set a corpse alight, whereas the claims about Santa are physically impossible to achieve. You are using a second logical fallacy of false comparison, as you are comparing what is possible, with what is not.
What you call forensic problems and analysing the testimony, is just a series of reasons for you to disbelieve the testimony, in a pseudo-scientific argument from incredulity. Just because you cannot scientifically work out, or have explained to you in a way that you find convincing, how the pyres operated, does not therefore mean there were no mass pyres.You're just making one sweeping assertion after another. "Burning corpses on pyres is possible. Therefore 1.5M people were burned on pyres at the AR camps." Nobody claims that burning corpses is impossible. But you aren't claiming a few bodies. You are claiming millions of bodies were burned. You are trying to settle the forensic problems without doing any calculations or science, and you are trying to settle the witness critique issues without analyzing any testimony. Unacceptable. All you do is invoke overly broad rules/overly vague arguments that you made up and cite these over and over as grounds to dismiss revisionist conclusions out of hand.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/log ... ncredulity
The revisionist argument of the witness claims are too incredible to believe, is as faulty as me arguing that because I believe the witnesses, therefore there were mass pyres.
I use the far more reliable and credible method of analysing witness evidence, by assessing it against other contemporaneous evidence, such as documents and archaeological finds, with consideration to the studies of witnesses, memory and recall. If a witness describes a pyre in a way that is exaggerated, hyperbolic and frankly unbelievable, but they are corroborated, then that means they are telling the truth, but their description is not reliable. They are not a credible witness, but they are telling the truth about mass pyres.
It is merely an exercise to work out how the pyres operated, but, since the evidence is limited to some poor descriptions, there is no other evidence such as a film of a pyre being set and fired and no comparable examples from elsewhere in the world, nothing definitive or evidential can be determined.
It would be an interesting exercise to give an independent relevant expert, such as a fire investigator, the witness statements and ask if they think the claims of huge mass pyres are possible. But, even if they concluded that they were not, that is not evidence to prove the witnesses lied and there were no such mass pyres.
If evidence is then provided to show that I am 7 feet tall, that would mean I did lie about being 8 feet tall, but I am still far taller than average. I am not a reliable or credible witness, but I am telling the truth that I am very tall, way over average. A lot of the testimony about the pyres appears exaggerated and is sensational. That does not mean all the witnesses lied about huge mass pyres. It just means we lack a reliable description of exactly how the pyres were set and worked.The Santa example is extreme, but there's no reason we can't use similar techniques and reasoning (e.g., basic arithmetic) to analyze and reject other claims, whether they are outright impossible or merely wildly implausible. That something is conceivably possible does not mean it's true.. If you tell me that you are 8 feet tall, that is not strictly impossible. There are humans who have been that tall. But it is exceedingly rare. The probability that you would be lying would be vastly greater than the probability that you are really 8 feet tall. So it is rational and justified to reject the claim and to only revise that conclusion once we are presented with sufficient evidence to the contrary.
Historically, what is more important, is whether there is evidence to prove mass pyres happened. The answer is yes, there is a lot of corroborating evidence. Witnesses, from those who worked inside the camps, to local people who reported many months of the smell of burning and smoke. The forensic and archaeological evidence of large areas of disturbed ground containing cremated remains. The circumstantial evidence of the Nazis wanting to cover up what they had done and Jews for whom all record of their existence ends inside the camps.