I am not able to do so - it is a relatively new addition, and certainly wasn't there when these discussions (on APUG) involved Simon Galley.
I'm blessed/cursed with having been trained in contract and statutory interpretation. Among many other things, it is a principle of interpretation that if something is referenced in only one section of a document, and refers to that section, it doesn't apply to the rest of the document. Thus my reading of those data sheets.
Me too. In fact, I wrote that kind of stuff too... engineering policy and standards. (and it really is a weird mix of blessing and curse.) I'd state it slightly differently to say the same thing as you said, "if something is referenced in only one section of a document, and refers to that section, it specifically applies to that section."
If the other sections are silent on the topic there are no implications that can be inferred from other sections. Silence, for us, sometimes resulted in contractual conflict because differing interpretations of what that silence implies. But in the end... silence is not directive nor is it implicative... it's either intentional or an error/omission and until something specific is written doesn't say anything. You know that!
Simon didn't say much either that is definitive or particularly authoritative, other than to support Michael's posture that If you pre-soak and don't have any uniformity issues, or don't pre-soak and don't have any uniformity issues, there is no reason to alter your process.
So now... which one of us has the bigger dick, or ego? LOL
