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No I don't. But the logic is based on the fact that we have been digging for centuries. Grave robbers have been looking in all nooks and crannies. Lidar has helped identify more sites.You know this how? (answer, you don't.)
But heres the opposing claim I was responding to. That not finding any more of these precision vases must mean they are fake. So why did you not make comment on such a speculative claim from your side. You seem to be monioring the posts. Or are you only monitoring one side.
Give me a break. Do you honestly think the authorities of anything are always transparent. Thats the real consipracy. You are in reality peddling a conspiracy by claiming that authorities are always honest and trasnparent about what information they all out. That they have no vested interests. Your making humans gods.Which is a conspiracy theory.
Cairo: Egyptology in crisis
Hawass quickly became tainted along with the crumbling regime and was engulfed by damaging charges of corruption and mismanagement. On Sunday 17 July, Hawass was abruptly sacked as the Minister of State for Antiquities Affairs in an overhaul of the country’s cabinet, and his controversial reign as one of the most powerful men in the archaeological world finally came to an end.

Cairo: Egyptology in crisis - World Archaeology
As the Arab Spring flooded through Egypt’s Tahrir Square, the old political order was swept away – and with it went Egyptology’s most controversial exponent, Dr Zahi Hawass. Tom St John Gray followed events earlier this year and now considers the consequences.

Now thats not whacko's saying this. This was generally acknowledged.
I just think the whole idea of using the fact that we need to do more escavations which may or may not happen and when may or may not turn up more precision vases means these vases are not real and came from a neolithic time in pre dynastic Egypt.New sites are found with some regularity. Additionally many sites have not been fully explored and certainly all known dig sites have not been fully excavated, often intentionally.
In fact counting all the out of place signatures we have enough already discovered works to do heaps of investigation on. I agree we are discovering new potential sites through tech like beneath the pyramids or undiscovered chambers in the Giza pyramid. Or the pyramids ability to generate energy in various forms such as acoustically.
Petrie may have discovered the legendary Aswan Labyrith. But so far escavation has been denied. The Labyrith was said to rival the pyramids in magnificance and technological feat. But I guess this is another whacko conspiracy theory that even Petrie thought true.
How does this happen when everyone is complaining about providence. We may be lucky to find a couple of dozen to test after excluding all private vases and what is made available to testers from museums.Sorry, this is absolutely not how science is done. If you want to know the properties of genuine vases you have to examine all of them in some group (like a particular find,
They test what is given to them and appreciate what has been allowed. Like the rediculous and unreal call for blind tests by those arguing with you. But its the same bias. All this restriction you want to place on those who investigate something you don't believe possible as a piori lol. You would not place thes restrictions on those supporting your ideas and assumptions.
If you want to find out the particular proprtird of particular vases proported to be Egyptian or from the Naqada culture then you home in on the ones that will most likely meet this criteria. There are literally 1,000s of vases we can be simple eyesight rule out and its a complete waste of time and money to do so. They can be immediately discounted.
The Naqada culture and into the 1st dynasties pottery and vases have literally over 100,000 items. Stone vases, pots, dishes and the like number in 10.s of 1,000s. Are you seriously suggesting that we cannot know that these vases are precise unless we measure 10, 20, 50 or 80,000 vases.
Even the specific region and time includes 10's of 1,000s of vases. There was some 40,000 plus just under the Stepped pyramid ranging from soft alabasta imprecise vases that you can see by eyesight and 1,000s of potentially precise vases including I would say 100,000 plus vase fragments like this one I linked earlier. They are also found under Mastaba 17 a predynastic pyramid like this oneor from a specific region or time).
Now lets forget about how exactly precise the method was. The circular marks clearly show some sort of very stable turning going on. PS and its not from a bore stick or bow drill as this was not available or even invented yet until late in the Old Kingdom.
So how many vases should we test from these sites. All of them or make a selection of them and if we want to show the precision choose the ones most likely to look like they would come close. Yeah tests a few softer hand made ones just to show they are different. But they are from the same site. Heck we even have an image of one from done on the site itself above.
Thats a silly comparison. For one theres 101 things you could study about a spider lol. Its legs compared to others. But even thats a specific thing. But the spider itself has many aspects. Whereas the vases if determining methodology is really a pretty single dimensional target. We have stone shaped in various hardnesses. Thats it. Thats precision tooling and machining science only.Selecting only the "best" objects is *bad* science. What do you think would be learned if we only examine the hardest rocks, or the brightest stars, or the largest spiders? SMH.
If you wanted to find out something specific about the bightest stars or hardest rocks then including other stuff like softest rocks or dim stars will distort your study.
We already know there are less precise vases in softer stones. We can eliminate all softer stone vases. We could eliminate all times except the time period targeted.
We can do seperate studies of softer stones or include a couple in the precision tests as done by Max and others. I think for some reasons the strutiny over researchers testi9ng ideas that fall outside the generally accepted ideas causes them to suddenly increase the criteria to unreal proportions. I don't think they would demand such criterai for similar situations that were confirming their assumptions.
Lol so the museum only allows around 10 vases per session and the aim is to find precision vases. You want to include known imprecise vases in that 10. How many lol. Is one enough or will you complain that its not enough. If the vases are in the museums and have good providence from the period they are displayed under and look like they would more likely be precise.Karoly's plan is much better than yours unless he is also planning a "quality cut" to the object selection in those museums.
Why would they choose obvious imprecise ones. We have already studied the imprecise ones as we have tons of them. Seriously is that the conditions your stipulating on these testers. That they waste their precise opportunity to tests a few vases in museums on vases we already know are imprecise to just confirm their imprecise. Seems unreal.
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