William Schryver wrote:Please don't give me the "I am not a mathematician" stuff. Those who can't follow the simple repeated subtraction I am using here are not just "not mathematicians", but are so innumerate as not to be trusted to reconcile their own checking account.
Hey! I resemble that remark.
I don't balance my checking account. I just hope there's enough there every time I swipe that debit card.
As far as this complex calculus stuff is concerned (), I don't really have a response.
I know John is aware of the criticisms. To date, he appears impervious to them. He acts supremely confident of his claims. If he is as mistaken on this question as you make him out to be, then -- as I've already said -- I think he has made a huge tactical error in advocating for this 1200cm scroll length. For one, I think it is unnecessary as an apologetic angle. But, most importantly, I don't see that any possible benefit from this argument could outweigh the inevitable negative impact on his reputation and the cause he claims to champion.
So, without accepting your claims, because I really don't understand it all, I remain open-minded and yet still disinclined to believe that Gee is as wrong as you make him out to be.
I do intend to quiz him further on this subject ...
Thank you for this reasonable response, which deserves a respectful acknowledgment.
I trust that in the end CK, who does not value his anonymity as I do, will get around to sending a research note on this topic of scroll length (and papyrus thickness) of the Smith papyri to an Egyptological journal; if it is short and to the point it would probably be published.
Then we shall have an end to the present rather mysterious fashion of wondering what John Gee's answer to CK's (and my) points might be.