• @prettybunnys
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    175 months ago

    Saying nothing will ever work ever and nothing is ever good is not being skeptical.

    The article you’re commenting on is the citation, you’re being cynical and acting in bad faith.

    People disagree with you, I’d wager if you used a little more tact you might have more reasonable discussion.

    • Philo
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      5 months ago

      I am not saying anying will never work, I am saying nothing that is currently being used, trialed, tested, presently or in the past, and the foreseeable future, will not work. That is a far cry from what you are accusing me of saying. I suggest you and a few others should read more critically and with less emotion when you disagree and you might not make such a gross misinterpretation of what was written.

      • @[email protected]
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        125 months ago

        This reads kind of like Derrida, or JB Peterson, where it almost seems like the goal is to deliberately avoid communicating in a way that is clear. To paraphrase, “You all misinterpret what I say, not because I’m bad at communication but because you all are.” If one person misunderstands or misinterprets, maybe that’s on them. If everyone does, it’s more likely that it’s on you.

        • Philo
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          5 months ago

          Another failure at reading without emotion. No wonder people think fusion is a sure thing.

          • Richard
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            105 months ago

            No wonder people think fission is a sure thing.

            This article is about fusion, not fission.

            • @prettybunnys
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              85 months ago

              And I believe we’ve reached the point where everyone can recognize that Philo is arguing in bad faith.

      • @[email protected]
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        105 months ago

        Not in our lifetime, nor the lifetime of our children or grandchildren. And it is almost a certainty not to be ever in the lifetime of man.

        Sure sounds like never.

        • Philo
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          -165 months ago

          Which part of the word ALMOST is where you lost your way?

          • @[email protected]
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            75 months ago

            Ah right, you left open the possibility that maybe in a billion years it might work. You sure got us. Fuck off.

              • @[email protected]
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                75 months ago

                I’m sorry you are saying other people are emotional and having responses like that? You are entirely trying to instigate a fight so you can feel some level of superiority?

                You are having exactly the conversation you are trying to have and it’s not a legitimate one.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        I am not saying anying will never work

        “And it is almost a certainty not to be ever in the lifetime of man.”

        Let’s just sliiiiide those goalposts a few hundred more feet huh?

        • Philo
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          -125 months ago

          And how long do you think man is gonna last the way things are going?

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        Why will a tokamak never work, exactly? We’ve been running fusion experiments in them for 60 years and have a pretty good idea that we can make one big enough to produce power. We’re just baby stepping through the work so we don’t build a $30 billion dollar power plant that’s missing a design element.

        K-DEMO, JT-60, DEMO, CFETR, STEP, and the US DoE’s planned reactor suggest a high level of confidence that the science is already there. It’s just an engineering problem, much like the nuclear bomb in 1935.