Sujet : Re: The Apollo moon landings
De : jimp (at) *nospam* gonzo.specsol.net (Jim Pennino)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativity sci.physicsSuivi-à : sci.physicsDate : 12. Jun 2025, 01:13:27
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <5miphl-9i0v.ln1@gonzo.specsol.net>
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User-Agent : tin/2.6.2-20220130 ("Convalmore") (Linux/5.15.0-141-lowlatency (x86_64))
In sci.physics Bertitaylor <
bertietaylor@myyahoo.com> wrote:
On Wed, 11 Jun 2025 18:03:00 +0000, David Canzi wrote:
On 6/10/25 18:03, Bertitaylor wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jun 2025 17:30:40 +0000, David Canzi wrote:
>
On 6/9/25 19:48, Peter Moylan wrote:
On 10/06/25 09:21, David Canzi wrote:
Given his extensive knowledge of Arindam Banerjee's innermost thoughts,
I believe that he and Arindam are sharing the same brain.
>
Like Arindam, Moylan too lives in Australia but beyond that they have
nothing in common. Arindam is Vedic-Soviet-Bihari-Bengali whereas Moylan
is a jealous sort. Arindam is a brilliant original genius whereas Moylan
is an Einsteinian academic.
>
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small
minds discuss people.
No greater ideas have emanated than from the mind of the BigDog, Arindam
(bin Einstein ban Gandhi) Banerjee, greatest genius of all time and sole
god among lotsa devils.
AI evalutation of the above text:
The text you provided is highly subjective, exaggerated, and hyperbolic.
Here's an evaluation from multiple perspectives:
1. Content & Style
Tone: Bombastic, grandiose, and sycophantic.
Language: It uses a mix of informal phrasing ("lotsa devils") with
exalted language ("greatest genius of all time"), resulting in a
jarring contrast.
Clarity: The message is clear in its intent to idolize Arindam
Banerjee, but it lacks specificity about what ideas or achievements
justify this praise.
2. Credibility
Unsupported Claims: There are no examples or evidence offered to
support the extraordinary claims made.
Name Usage: The phrase “(bin Einstein ban Gandhi)” is confusing and
likely a play on names (possibly suggesting "greater than Einstein
and Gandhi" or combining traits of both), but it lacks clear meaning
or context.
3. Overall Evaluation
Literary Merit: As an over-the-top tribute, it may serve a rhetorical
or humorous purpose, but it is not intellectually rigorous or persuasive.
Rhetorical Effectiveness: The hyperbole undermines its credibility.
Readers seeking serious argument or insight are unlikely to be convinced.
If this is meant to be serious commentary, it needs substantial revision
with clear reasoning and evidence. If it's satire or fan-style writing,
it works as an example of exaggerated adulation but would still benefit
from refinement.
-- penninojim@yahoo.com