You are quite the enigmatic case. Almost schizophrenic for lack of a better word.
Now you're a psychiatrist?
I will not allow you to reverse our roles.
You're making an affirmative claim of fraud. You have the burden of proof.
As I pointed out, one cannot prove a negative using science.
You don't understand what "prove a negative means." You're not proposing or being asked to prove a negative. You say you have alternative explanations for the evidence. That is an affirmative claim. The affirmative claim has a burden of proof. An affirmative proof is not proof of a negative. It's proof of a
different positive.
I think that is why your forum is structured as it is, with the rules it has, to make it impossible to force you to prove your claims.
The body of evidence in favor of Apollo is out there and widely accepted. That's what you're frantically trying to explain away. When you attempt such an explanation in affirmative terms, such as you have, you have the burden of proof.
We cannot prove Apollo astronauts wouldn't survive without duplicating the precise conditions, which is un-doable.
Who is "we"?
Why is duplication the only method of testing?
Why would such a test be impossible?
Prove it.
The biomedical science surrounding Apollo is well documented, including the testing programs. It forms the basis of quite a lot of health physics. Your claim is simply a handwaving denial of all that. How is that evidence?
You claim I'm no scientist, well, prove that too.
You claim you are a scientist. I disputed that claim and gave you my reasons for disputing it. If you claim to be a scientist, and on that basis assert that we should accept your wisdom on what proper scientific methodology should be, then you have the burden to prove that foundation.
...until you prove every element of it those elements remain merely a claim and nothing more.
The body of evidence is out there and has been for decades. It's what the hoax theorists have been trying to explain away. You're simply assuring us there exist conclusive rebuttals for all that evidence. Allusions to evidence are not evidence.
Unless someone independently reproduces the accomplishment...
No, that's one of the common layman's misperceptions of what the scientific method is. Feats in history aren't required to be reproduced in order for the first one to be considered valid. Reproducibility in science has to do with the way an experiment is constructed with regard to controllable or uncontrollable variables.