I holidayed at Loch Ness this year and I paid a visit to the excellent Visitor Centre where there told me all this so I already know it. I also recall that they said that whilst no one can really prove that Nessie doesn't exist there's no good reason to say that it does exist and the odds are certainly stacked against it. Which is what I do.Godfree wrote:John ,,,there has been so much done to try and find this thing , this NessyJohn wrote:We haven't actually proven that at at all. We're aware that there is no way to explain the presence of such a creature given our understanding of the loch's ecosystem and what sort of creature Nessie is claimed to be based on the different descriptions people have given. We also know that there are a number of known phenomena that offer reasonable explanations for the reported sightings, and we also know that some of the sightings have been fraudulent rather than mistaken, so it seems entirely reasonable to conclude that people are witnessing the explainable phenomena rather than a monster.Godfree wrote:We can and have proven it impossible for there to be a dinosaur living in Loch Ness , but you say this is not proof ,,????
Do I believe Nessie exists? No. Can I prove it? No, but I can offer explanations that don't need it to exist.
that yes we can say we have proven it does not exist ,
they have used sonar to scan the whole lake ,
there is not enough fish in the Loch to support a large animal ,!!!
the last dinosaur was millions of years ago ,
if you can't accept that we have proven Nessy is not there ,
then there is no proof good enough for you ,
if that isn't sufficient proof for you , I would say your expectations are
unrealistic and beyond looking at the facts and more about
intellectual exercise , arguing about definition of terms ,
more than getting to know reality ,
I saw a woman who was biologist or similar ,
She could easlily say we have proven Nessy does not exist ,
and she didn't need sonar or eye witness accounts to draw her conclusions,
just the knowledge about dinosaurs was more than enough ,
And even if there was a "creature", which I don't believe there to be, and who said it was a dinosaur? Who said it lived in the Loch and didn't just visit regularly?
Incidentally, I usually find that people who think "arguing about definition of terms" have a tendency to indulge in sloppy thinking which is why they want to use definitions loosely. Philosophical thinking should not be sloppy.