Zombie Inflationism I: Death Star Arguments
Posted: Fri May 09, 2014 9:46 am
The "Zombie Inflationism" series refers to the fact that inflationism is dead right now. There's hope yet for the inflationists, as I've noted, that the wide open field for the new canon will allow for inflationist nonsense to return, but as it stands at this moment, inflationism just doesn't fly.
That said, there are twitches and hair growth and other autonomic events still occurring, and so it behooves Star Wars tech realists to keep an eye on the corpse and make sure it doesn't rise up and start trying to eat our brains. With that, and not inflationist teeth, in our minds, let's ponder some of the areas in which the inflationists hope to reanimate themselves based on canon evidence.
The goal here is to discuss these arguments (and any others that I might've missed) and ponder or repost counterarguments.
Pt. II: Starships and Spacecraft
http://www.starfleetjedi.net/forum/view ... f=8&t=6593
Pt. III: Other Weapons
http://www.starfleetjedi.net/forum/view ... f=8&t=6594
I. The Death Star
The Death Stars always have been and always will be the king of the Vs. Debate. Enormous battlestations with the power to destroy fleets and planets, these monstrosities are remarkable enough without becoming the subject of legends. However, there are legends associated with them.
A. Dodonna's Quote
Some are still trying to use Dodonna's half the fleet quote to prove super-powerful capital ship weaponry, under the theory that the superlaser counts. The novelization's "dense concentration of firepower" line pretty much kills this one dead, so far as I can tell. Even Brian Young, who at least cherry-picks from the novelizations, talks about Dodonna's lines in the novelization but skips that part completely.
Verdict: DOA, still not moving
B. The Shield Argument
(i.e. that the DS shield had to have withstood massive KE)
1. Note that the Death Star shield could not even withstand the kinetic energy of X-Wings or even their blaster bolts, so the concept that it would somehow repel large fast-moving chunks of planet smells of nonsense. (Does earth's magnetic field really deflect anything other than solar farts? Does it cause significant deflection of satellites/probes?)
2. There's also the conceit in this claim that the shield power requirements are equivalent to their effect . . . that is to say, the idea is that the shields must be powerful enough to do the work claimed for them, rather than acting like a wall or a magnetic field.
3. For those who reject the Superlaser Effect, make note of the fact that the beam and the blast zone, in non-superlaser-effect thinking, might ought to prevent some of that debris from heading toward the Death Star, since presumably the Death Star fired dead-on into Alderaan. Think of shaped charges, if you will.
4. Note that the Superlaser Effect would remove much of the possible debris. For instance, there is the calculation I've seen recently where someone posited 10.98 billion or trillion chunks of debris, but the actual visual shows nothing like that. Also note the remnant debris the Falcon comes into, small and cool and slow.
Verdict: Cool, but not as close to room-temperature as I would like, in the sense that the argument could be made that something might've headed for the Death Star.
C. Scaling Down from the Death Star
1. Different technology.
2. Exactly how are they scaling down, again? Reactor size? What about all that barrel scaling they used to do?
Verdict: This scaling stuff is nonsense, of course, but needs a cogent, unified counterargument beyond merely pointing to the canon and asking where the biggatons are. Okay, well, maybe it doesn't need one, 'cause the lack of biggatons works, but it'd be nice anyway.
That said, there are twitches and hair growth and other autonomic events still occurring, and so it behooves Star Wars tech realists to keep an eye on the corpse and make sure it doesn't rise up and start trying to eat our brains. With that, and not inflationist teeth, in our minds, let's ponder some of the areas in which the inflationists hope to reanimate themselves based on canon evidence.
The goal here is to discuss these arguments (and any others that I might've missed) and ponder or repost counterarguments.
Pt. II: Starships and Spacecraft
http://www.starfleetjedi.net/forum/view ... f=8&t=6593
Pt. III: Other Weapons
http://www.starfleetjedi.net/forum/view ... f=8&t=6594
I. The Death Star
The Death Stars always have been and always will be the king of the Vs. Debate. Enormous battlestations with the power to destroy fleets and planets, these monstrosities are remarkable enough without becoming the subject of legends. However, there are legends associated with them.
A. Dodonna's Quote
Some are still trying to use Dodonna's half the fleet quote to prove super-powerful capital ship weaponry, under the theory that the superlaser counts. The novelization's "dense concentration of firepower" line pretty much kills this one dead, so far as I can tell. Even Brian Young, who at least cherry-picks from the novelizations, talks about Dodonna's lines in the novelization but skips that part completely.
Verdict: DOA, still not moving
B. The Shield Argument
(i.e. that the DS shield had to have withstood massive KE)
1. Note that the Death Star shield could not even withstand the kinetic energy of X-Wings or even their blaster bolts, so the concept that it would somehow repel large fast-moving chunks of planet smells of nonsense. (Does earth's magnetic field really deflect anything other than solar farts? Does it cause significant deflection of satellites/probes?)
2. There's also the conceit in this claim that the shield power requirements are equivalent to their effect . . . that is to say, the idea is that the shields must be powerful enough to do the work claimed for them, rather than acting like a wall or a magnetic field.
3. For those who reject the Superlaser Effect, make note of the fact that the beam and the blast zone, in non-superlaser-effect thinking, might ought to prevent some of that debris from heading toward the Death Star, since presumably the Death Star fired dead-on into Alderaan. Think of shaped charges, if you will.
4. Note that the Superlaser Effect would remove much of the possible debris. For instance, there is the calculation I've seen recently where someone posited 10.98 billion or trillion chunks of debris, but the actual visual shows nothing like that. Also note the remnant debris the Falcon comes into, small and cool and slow.
Verdict: Cool, but not as close to room-temperature as I would like, in the sense that the argument could be made that something might've headed for the Death Star.
C. Scaling Down from the Death Star
1. Different technology.
2. Exactly how are they scaling down, again? Reactor size? What about all that barrel scaling they used to do?
Verdict: This scaling stuff is nonsense, of course, but needs a cogent, unified counterargument beyond merely pointing to the canon and asking where the biggatons are. Okay, well, maybe it doesn't need one, 'cause the lack of biggatons works, but it'd be nice anyway.