As Ack notes, you have a tendency to take an interpretation, and treat it as hard fact. I'm not in any kind of position to go through each of your posts and break it down, particularly since your reaction to that has consistently been hostile in response. You said earlier that you feel other people are nitpicking on things you say, even though all I've really seen is people responding to claims you make. It's hard to have a constructive discussion when you appear (again, I don't think you are, hence my entry into the discussion above) to be attacking people for their writing, then appear to be attacking people for trying to counter your assertions.
I'm spotting a cultural difference here... it's a prediction of the future, of course it's not guaranteed to be true. Also, all observations are inherently limited and fallible. As such, even a direct statement still admits to uncertainty and should, and will, be changed in the future as further evidence is provided.
Whether there is objective truth or not (I have faith that there is, but that's a completely different matter) I believe that humans are fundamentally incapable of knowing objective truth. All truth known to humans is subjective and fundamentally flawed in various ways. As such, it is my viewpoint that where one draws the line of "blatantly admitting to uncertainty" seems very arbitrary and I'm really unclear on where people draw the line. (Especially since every culture seems to put it somewhere else, and telling which culture(s) somebody is drawing from is rather difficult)
If one wanted to actually be accurate, there would need to be a lot of qualifiers used. "I remember perceiving that this instrument indicated that there was an event indicative of an earthquake; the maps I recall observing seem to indicate that the probable location for the possible earthquake was what I would call a small city commonly known as "New Brunswick", if my memory is accurate." Probably still asserts too much truth in the face of uncertainty.
Also... what do you mean by "consistently hostile"? I won't deny that my word choices have probably been poor a fair amount of the time, but hostility has not been an actual motivation except when people, especially Ack, ascribe negative motivations for what I have said; I freely admit that I do tend to become hostile when people hurt me and having people assume I'm trying to be a jerk or whatever is very unpleasant.
To generalize:
Try not to make hard statements of truth about things that are not yet written in the story. Implied by current available text does not mean guaranteed by current available text.
So, massive change in wording suggested to deal with different cultural assumptions; a daunting task, but definitely worthy of contemplation.
Especially do not try to argue about conclusions based on multiple steps of assumption which are not actually given by the current available text.
Do you mean "don't post extrapolations from canon" or "don't argue that your extrapolations from canon are correct"? The first would be rather disheartening; doing so is one of the greatest pleasures of exploring a fictional universe for me. The second is one that I at least think I'm mostly following; to the best of my knowledge, I have tried to explain why I believe that my extrapolations are correct, or reasonable, when people discuss them instead of trying to convince people that other possibilities are wrong.
Try not to assume that any in-story perspective is actually correct. Ack is fairly good at presenting unreliable narrators, and it's a facet of narrative he leans on heavily. Given that this is Worm and basically EVERYTHING unwise about Taylor's choices are due to misconceptions about other people's motivations, this is quite in keeping with source material.
Good advice in general, though I expand this to "any perspective from anyone". Even the author's perspective only encompasses what they intend, not some kind of objective truth.
Outside of the context of writing discussion, a friend some time back gave me a notion that I've found helpful for certain types of communication issues:
If someone says something that doesn't seem to make sense, first try to imagine a world in which what they say is right. If you can't, try to find out if there's something you're missing, rather than assume fault.
Sure, it's possible the other person is wrong, but if you argue starting from that perspective, it's much, much, much harder to find out if they're right.
Interesting, though difficult; most of the time when I try to acquire an explanation people don't have an answer they're willing to give.
Thank you, esotericist; you have been one of the most pleasant and reasonable people to converse with on this board that I can recall and I appreciate your assistance.