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I've got more issues with your response than with the original statement, but I'm not going to nitpick. I do get your main thrust - it's a system with interesting dynamics.
I just wish you were more precise with your statements, and make sure you don't say things you are not certain about - as a self-proclaimed armchair scientist you should hold yourself to high standards of discourse, IMHO.
Again, only the RESTRICTED 3-body problem has been fully mathematically solved. You DONT GET SPHERICAL OR ELLIPTICAL ORBITS in systems like the pluto-charon system. Nix and Hydra are all over the damned place; without absolutely precise starting data, you simply cannot predict their orbits!! That means that the restricted 3-body solution DOES NOT WORK. (Without absolute precision, the prediction of the system will diverge from the empirical system's actual motions, given sufficient time.)
Snide remarks about "What Lagrange thought" not withstanding. (Who's solutions are clearly bound inside the restricted problem set, since they dealt with spherical and ellipsoidal orbits. Even thinking about Legrangian solutions in the Pluto-charon system is a giant fucking non-sequitur!)
I dont think I can make it any clearer than that. There is more to the 3-body problem than the restricted set, which means that the full 3-body problem remains to be fully solved. The restricted set just covers (what we feel should be) the majority of circumstances. Pointing to the restricted set solutions and using that as argumentative proof that systems outside that bound cannot work is fallacy. Such systems MAY work, we just cant properly verify that they can or can't. (Which indicates that the model still needs revision!)
Your reaction implied "restricted 3-body problem" == "All of the 3-body problem". It does not.
Study of systems with very complex orbital mechanics, like this one, is useful to fully solving the system in the remainder of the 3 body problem. It gives an empirical system to observe, to better frame the mathematical model against.
Yeesh.
Or, do you want me to have to explain why a non-spheroid, or non-elliptical orbit in a 3 body system is outside the scope of the current model, as clarification for my original statement about how the 3-body problem has been a thorn in the side of science for years? (Last I checked, a problem that is over 400 years old, NOT BEING FULLY SOLVED, satisfies all of those conditions.)