It's amazing and sad that in this day an age, with all the testing that has been done on the subject, that so many on here, especially long term members, have no clue as to the actual science involved.
Sorry to make you sad, Neil, but science is a process, not an absolute truth. I used to be involved in research, so I have seen it happen every day. Yesterday's minister of indisputable scientific truth becomes today's laughing stock.
I'm not ignorant of the work that has been done (so far) by the likes of Dr. Dave, Bob Jewett and Mike Page, and I have followed it all with the simple college physics background I have and it all makes perfect sense. Then I watch a top player doing things that simply don't seem possible and all that faith in scientific "knowledge" goes out the window. Even Dr. Dave admits he got it wrong regarding cue speed and squirt, but just today I've read several posts that are based on his old conclusions that have now been "proven" wrong. Who knows, maybe he was right in the first place?
Not everything in nature can be modeled after F=ma, or even differential and integral calculus. Engineers are constantly up against the wall of multiple variables in their designs, and must resort to differential equations to account for all of these things.
I have yet to see a single study that incorporates all of the possible variables within a single billiard shot. Cloth type and condition, cushions, ball weights, cue mass, balance and weight distribution, acceleration rate, stroke length, final velocity, follow through, tip type and shape, chalk type, ball condition, temperature, relative humidity... the list of possibilities can go on indefinitely.
In the meantime, I'll continue to hit the balls the way I always have and try to hit many more in the future. Pay attention to the results, and let my body work out the "physics" over time. As long as most of them go in the hole and I plant the rock anywhere near where I intended it to be, I'm happy leaving science out of this beautiful art form.