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actually what i'm saying is that even offering up "... controlled demolition ..." as a cause shows at the very least a willingness (if not an outright hope) to believe there was a conspiracy...
No, once again. What is required is simply the scientific method applied to a problem. Again, a valid hypothesis has to be able to explain all the known conditions. When a certain hypothesis explains all the observable data, it should then be tested.
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1) do you agree that if there was a controlled demolition there had to have been a conspiracy?
That is irrelevant to utilizing the scientific method to solve a problem.
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2) do you personally believe there is a higher possibility that there was a controlled demolition than that there wasn't (i know you don't *know* that, i'm asking what you think, what you believe to be true)?
It doesn't matter. The point is was this a scientific investigation, using scientific methods, or was it a political investigation, where certain possibilities were not addressed?
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But it is wrong to create a hypothesis that dosn't fit all the facts and then claim that a less probable hypothesis that does fit the facts is invalid - it can only be invalidated by facts, not innuendo.
what less probable hypothesis that fits all the facts are you speaking of?
Controlled demolition would be one. I am unaware of other hypothesis that fit all the known facts.
As I have said before, the NIST hypothesis is not satifactory because they simply ignore and leave unexplained observable data - the models only reach the point of collapse initiation - so they do not explaim the free fall speeds of collapse, the hot spots left for weeks afterwards, the molten metal, or the diagonal breaks in steel beams that photographs have shown.