But it's just not relevant to the original discussion. It wouldn't matter in the least even if Mr. Burns had a doctorate from MIT and we're playing into his hands by arguing about his degree rather than his abysmal writing.
Burns actually makes two separate lines of reasoning in the book. The primary claim is the one involving the golf game in 1969 and the later claims of supernatural confirmation. The 1969 golf game is an allegation of fact, but stands with no testable substantiation whatsoever, and in contrast a whole raft of counter-evidence against it that Burns will not address.
The other line of reasoning appears early and vanishes quickly, but it reappears in the cover letter he sent with the book. Burns says his short essay alleging to prove via physics that Apollo was impossible was good enough to merit a Physics degree. Burns says, "Look, here's my degree." But that's not proof his little essay was what got it, which is what we were trying to determine. The connection between the paper and the degree serves only to buttress Burns' claim that the paper is probative.
During my engineering career I interviewed hundreds of job candidates. I quickly learned to pretty much ignore the candidate's university and even grades...
I never inquire about the actual grades. I pay some attention to the university, usually to see if I have colleagues teaching there.
Like you, I pay attention almost exclusively to whether a candidate can "walk the walk."
I also never saw much point in asking formal quiz questions...
I have only one: compute the effective data bandwidth of a 747 carrying CD-ROMs from Los Angeles to New York. It's an exercise in requirements analysis; I don't really expect an answer.
On this basis there's no question that Mr Burns is trying to bullshit us; his degree, if any, is irrelevant.
I think I've amply demonstrated that he can't "walk the walk." The degree itself is somewhat of a red herring. The actual challenge sort of got kicked off the curb into the gutter. The validity of the essay -- which Burns hopes to inflate by alleging it to a degree -- is what interests me, and I have made a suitable study of it.