OK. I read the first paragraph or two and then ran out of energy (vibrational and otherwise). Why can't you imagine that two wholly independent structures could react differently from one another to, lets say, a heavy footfall on one hand or the 1812 Overture blasting into your listening space, on the other? (I see that you don't believe that the energy put out by a loudspeaker can cause damaging mechanical feedback. This is your right, just as it would be your right to believe the earth is flat.) If you can't imagine that two structures mounted on your shelf might respond to energy coming into them by any of these and several other various routes in different ways (different resonance frequencies, longer or shorter time to dissipate the energy, etc, etc.), and if you cannot imagine that there is some advantage to having a single combined structure that responds in unison to extraneous disturbances, so as to minimize relative spurious motions of the cartridge vis the LP groove, then I cannot help you, but it is not I who is ignoring or not understanding the science. By the way also, you CANNOT stop all energy from entering into your turntable/tonearm. No one can. Unless you want to send your system into gravity- and friction-free outer space and cut rocket power thereafter. (Good luck setting VTF out there.) So, it's nice that you prefer a totally isolated system, we all would, but it ain't gonna happen on earth.
By the way, the PLINTH has nothing to do with this discussion. That is a different obsession of yours and the subject of a different thread.
You also wrote, "So now your a priori proposition (devoid of any facts or evidence) has been questioned .you are left with the claim that the advantage of a plinth is that a separate tonearm base is likely to be adjusted out-of-level?" Did you really read my preceding post? That is exactly what I said I did NOT say. We've never discussed that issue before, so far as I can remember. It's pretty obvious that any design that gets the tonearm bearings and the platter surface plane parallel is OK, regardless of how it's done. This has nothing to do with our subject.
I think you want this thread to be read and contributed to only by those who swallow your line of thinking hook, line, and sinker, and who come here to kiss your butt.
By the way, the PLINTH has nothing to do with this discussion. That is a different obsession of yours and the subject of a different thread.
You also wrote, "So now your a priori proposition (devoid of any facts or evidence) has been questioned .you are left with the claim that the advantage of a plinth is that a separate tonearm base is likely to be adjusted out-of-level?" Did you really read my preceding post? That is exactly what I said I did NOT say. We've never discussed that issue before, so far as I can remember. It's pretty obvious that any design that gets the tonearm bearings and the platter surface plane parallel is OK, regardless of how it's done. This has nothing to do with our subject.
I think you want this thread to be read and contributed to only by those who swallow your line of thinking hook, line, and sinker, and who come here to kiss your butt.