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[+]mburke11241 point-1 points0 points
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[–]mburke11241 point
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Asking for a source is never a bad thing, and should never be viewed as such. If you don't have one just say so.
I have a degree in biology and a minor in chemistry... what you said sounds like someone who has no real knowledge of chemistry. Like you are trying to pass off what someone else told you as knowledge. Maybe you remembered some words and just keep repeating that. But that is not a source. There is tons of research out there on marijuana. If you are trying to pass something off as fact and someone asks for a source you're allowed to say "I don't have one". Don't tell someone to google "the difference between a solution and a mixture" like that is at all what we talking about.
[+]Sciency0 points0 points0 points
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[–]Sciency0 points
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So, lets have a discussion then.
Based on your knowledge of biology and chem, what am I incorrect about? It's pretty clear that I didn't have a source, as I stated that, along why why I couldn't find one. Its obvious that my 8-9 years since graduation are showing, because I don't use the same terms in discussion that you would like. I wouldn't mind an update if I was incorrect about anything.
My only claim was saying that: just because cannabanoids are more or less exclusively lipid-soluble, they are not excluded from being present as a mixture in water, as they are still subject to density and gravity. Unless I missed something about mixtures vs solutions, and missed something about the thermodynamics involved, I fail to see how that could be an incorrect claim.
I agree that asking for a source is never a bad thing, but it is disrespectful to ask a stranger a question, and accept the answer to that question from an unrelated other. Hence my statement: "Talk to me, not the one who hijacked my response."
I'm not saying your correct or incorrect. I'm just saying I asked for a source and you threw out some generic terms and called it a day. What benefit would googling the difference between a solution and a mixture do? No need to get your panties in a bunch. If you don't have any sources that's fine. It just means I'm less inclined to believe you. You stated something as a fact have nothing to back it up. No big deal. The internet is filled with people who make declarative statements with nothing to back up their claims.
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[–] mburke1124 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago (edited ago)
Asking for a source is never a bad thing, and should never be viewed as such. If you don't have one just say so.
I have a degree in biology and a minor in chemistry... what you said sounds like someone who has no real knowledge of chemistry. Like you are trying to pass off what someone else told you as knowledge. Maybe you remembered some words and just keep repeating that. But that is not a source. There is tons of research out there on marijuana. If you are trying to pass something off as fact and someone asks for a source you're allowed to say "I don't have one". Don't tell someone to google "the difference between a solution and a mixture" like that is at all what we talking about.
[–] Sciency ago (edited ago)
So, lets have a discussion then.
Based on your knowledge of biology and chem, what am I incorrect about? It's pretty clear that I didn't have a source, as I stated that, along why why I couldn't find one. Its obvious that my 8-9 years since graduation are showing, because I don't use the same terms in discussion that you would like. I wouldn't mind an update if I was incorrect about anything.
My only claim was saying that: just because cannabanoids are more or less exclusively lipid-soluble, they are not excluded from being present as a mixture in water, as they are still subject to density and gravity. Unless I missed something about mixtures vs solutions, and missed something about the thermodynamics involved, I fail to see how that could be an incorrect claim.
I agree that asking for a source is never a bad thing, but it is disrespectful to ask a stranger a question, and accept the answer to that question from an unrelated other. Hence my statement: "Talk to me, not the one who hijacked my response."
[–] mburke1124 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago
I'm not saying your correct or incorrect. I'm just saying I asked for a source and you threw out some generic terms and called it a day. What benefit would googling the difference between a solution and a mixture do? No need to get your panties in a bunch. If you don't have any sources that's fine. It just means I'm less inclined to believe you. You stated something as a fact have nothing to back it up. No big deal. The internet is filled with people who make declarative statements with nothing to back up their claims.