Reviewing this thread, sometimes I think the better approach is to adopt the 'how could so many people be in on the hoax' tact immediately and ignore the initial claims.
The issue with that from my point of view is threefold:
1: Their whole argument is usually 'I have found an issue that can only mean a hoax', and I would rather present alternatives and show where their understanding is wrong than sidestep their 'unanswerable' question.
2: It is hard to tell at the start whether someone is a dyed-in-the-wool hoax believer or just misguided, and I prefer to remain optimistic at least for the first few posts.
3: The question 'how could so many people be in on it' will end up in the same to and fro anyway, since they invariably cannot conceive of how reality actually works when it comes to things like Apollo. Tim already said he believes only about 50 people would be needed to pull it off. It's easier to drill down into specifics and give conrete examples of where someone is in error (such as showing that the numbers absolutely do not fit his argument) than to concoct what may appear to any spectators to be no more than 'you say, I say'. Plus the more they keep ignoring the specific simple questions and blustering the more they undermine their own arguments.
I've looked back and realised that several people were posting in response, often with the same point, and the volume of posts could become confusing for the individual on the receiving end.
I honestly have no sympathy for them. If they come to a group forum they can expect a group response, and if they are not willing to take the time to consider the responses before replying again with more rubbish they earn everything they get.
Having said this, the consistency of response from both sides of the debate provides a record Tim's ineptitude when faced with basic math, the concepts of using data correctly, and the difference between visual inspection and analytical processes. He arrived at the board with professed expertise and a smoking gun, elevated himself as the holder of privileged knowledge with a cast iron case, and was then quickly found wanting after 1000+ posts. I can see the merit of the approach followed last night too.
That's where I see the merit in it too.
[/quote]I've read a few of the recent posts and am thinking about the simplicity of the counter argument. Occam's razor springs to mind.
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Occam's razor unfortunately only works when someone is willing to consider they may be wrong as one possible answer to the problem they think they have found. As several people tried to point out, Tim refused to even consider the possibility that he just didn't fully understand how to interpret the data.