I can see where you’re coming from here but I don’t think the specifics really apply in this case.
There are many questions to raise about this google doc, and it seems fair to the reader to ask them all in one place rather than drip-feeding throughout a tree of replies and reply-replies. If responding to them all would take up too much of Halstead’s time, he can say so, no?
There’s not usually very much to elaborate when it comes to questions of omission: x is an important aspect of climate risk, Halstead has not mentioned x.
I suppose you could add the implicit points (studies of topics should include or at least mention the important aspects of those topics, space wasn’t a constraint, Halstead knows what the terms mean, etc.) but that’s unnecessary in 99% of conversations and not a standard we expect anywhere else.
I can see where you’re coming from here but I don’t think the specifics really apply in this case.
There are many questions to raise about this google doc, and it seems fair to the reader to ask them all in one place rather than drip-feeding throughout a tree of replies and reply-replies. If responding to them all would take up too much of Halstead’s time, he can say so, no?
There’s not usually very much to elaborate when it comes to questions of omission: x is an important aspect of climate risk, Halstead has not mentioned x.
I suppose you could add the implicit points (studies of topics should include or at least mention the important aspects of those topics, space wasn’t a constraint, Halstead knows what the terms mean, etc.) but that’s unnecessary in 99% of conversations and not a standard we expect anywhere else.