Originally posted by Iconoclast
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For you, my friend: re: the ultra-tiny brass particle found by Dr. Turgoose in the ‘M.K.’ markings on the watch.
This on-going campaign about the hoaxer needing great technical ability, a neutron microscope, etc., to ‘implant’ this particle has always struck me as a bizarre, desperate, and misleading suggestion.
No one is claiming, or has ever claimed, that the particle was deliberately implanted. I can only imagine that Turgoose must have been responding to a question that some innocent soul had posed at some point: ‘Could a hoaxer have implanted it’? Obviously, the answer would be no—or at least the (correct) assumption would be that it is wildly wildly unlikely.
So, I think we can all agree: there is no doubt whatsoever that the particle found by Turgoose had been left behind by the etching tool. No sane person would suggest otherwise.
Now, using simple logic, if the scratches were made by an etching tool in 1889, they could have been made by an etching tool in 1910, or in 1955, or in 1992. At some point, the etching tool left behind the particle. There is no dispute.
The only real question is whether the brass particle was already dark when it had been left behind by the tool or whether it had darkened ‘in situ,’ and, if the latter, whether this darkening took place over decades, or whether it took place instantaneously by the introduction of some corrosive and darkening solvent, such as vinegar, etc., that one might have naturally and innocently used during a cleaning regime.
You appear to be using Feldman’s technique of suggesting a wildly improbably scenario (that no one has ever suggested) in order to dismiss the plausibility of a modern hoax. Isn’t this generally referred to as a ‘straw argument’?
I remain yours, &tc.,
The Great Unpersuaded
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