Fancier wrote:
[...]
The lack of a "true value" does make accuracy and bias rather fuzzy concepts.
There is a very wonderful interview where Feynman is being asked some really demanding questions (Does God exist? Is there an ultimate theory?). He makes the argument that he doesn't really think like that, that all he does is observe and see where that takes him. Maybe there is an ultimate theory of everything, maybe it is like an onion but the layers are infinite and all you do is keep peeling back layers. The tricky part is his infamous quote - "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool." . He doesn't use the terms, but what he describes is pragmatic coherentism and you can clearly see he is talking about convergence of ideas vs absolute positions.
If you want to see this in action then this thread is an interesting example :
http://www.cliffstamp.com/knives/forum/read.php?3,37143" target="_blank . I start off with a really simple goal :
-show the scale and direction of the influence of grit on edge retention on a slice
However alone the way then a lot of interesting things start to come up and lots of ideas start being explored :
-what sharpness actually means in regards to slicing and how two force measurements are needed to get the full pictures
-how the cutting mechanic changes at high polishes and it makes the performance rebound up from a local minimum
-details on the actual nature of the teeth which form and how they change at ultra low grits and why this makes the performance fall off after a local maximum
-that the edge retention can actually be predicted from two sharpness measurements and using them to calculate the edge retention factor (initial slicing sharpness / initial push cutting sharpness)
It also asks a bunch of questions such as :
-If a 3Cr13 knife at < 55 HRC with a really less than ideal geometry and grit finish can still slice ~1000 pieces of 1/2" hemp and readily slice newsprint then how important really are tests on edge retention on a slice for steels
-how can you combine edge retention on a slice and push together to get some kind of total edge retention statistic and what does this mean in terms of what would be a kind of ideal finish
Of course there is always time/money constraints. I would like to actually see what would happen if I did the same work with AEB-L, ATS-34, S30V, M4, 121REX but that isn't practical.