gainer
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- Joined
- Sep 20, 2002
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- 3,699
The only experimental evidence missing from Tom Hoskinson's statement is what remains of the warm toned image from Microdl-X development after bleaching. Your comment should have been based on a simple test, not on conjecture that perhaps the warm part of the image will remain after bleaching.
Any scientific background should include lessons in and practice of the scientific method. It is a proven fact that any system of axioms at least as rich as arithmetic is either incomplete or inconsistent or both. We cannot prove a theory. Our best bet is to try our best to disprove it. Instaed of searching for experimental proof that a theory is true, we must search for experimental evidence that for at least one case it is not true. Every case where the theory is applicable broadens the range of practical use of the theory. In other words, the scientist attacks his own theories with a vengeance. Part of your attack on your own theory should have been to bleach a Microdol X image to see what actually remains.
Can we say that a single-agent developer always minimizes or eliminates edge effects? I think not. Any experiment aimed at finding the controlling factors of edge effects must be a multivariate one with developer composition, concentration, agitation technique and other factors.
Now, if your purpose is only to correlate microscopic evidence of edge effect with subjective evaluation, be careful what you ask the subjective evaluators to do.
Any scientific background should include lessons in and practice of the scientific method. It is a proven fact that any system of axioms at least as rich as arithmetic is either incomplete or inconsistent or both. We cannot prove a theory. Our best bet is to try our best to disprove it. Instaed of searching for experimental proof that a theory is true, we must search for experimental evidence that for at least one case it is not true. Every case where the theory is applicable broadens the range of practical use of the theory. In other words, the scientist attacks his own theories with a vengeance. Part of your attack on your own theory should have been to bleach a Microdol X image to see what actually remains.
Can we say that a single-agent developer always minimizes or eliminates edge effects? I think not. Any experiment aimed at finding the controlling factors of edge effects must be a multivariate one with developer composition, concentration, agitation technique and other factors.
Now, if your purpose is only to correlate microscopic evidence of edge effect with subjective evaluation, be careful what you ask the subjective evaluators to do.