True or False: The stick determines elevator position and elevator position determines angle of attack. When the critical angle of attack is exceeded, the wing stalls. So, given a design with enough elevator authority, if the stick is in your lap, then the wing is stalled. If the stick is, say an inch farther forward, the wing will not be stalled. Period.
I had a conversation with a United Airlines captain (737) the other day, and he said I was wrong. As I get older, I tend to be less argumentative, so I didn't pursue it. He said some things about different size loops (don't know what that was about). When he mentioned the Amazon crash off the coast of Texas (the overall conversation was about MCAS), I said that, in a video I had seen (months earlier), it looked like the plane may have been stalled. The descent angle appeared steep and yet the angle between the longitudinal axis of the plane and the ground appeared to be significantly shallower (i.e., stalled). He said something about the descent angle being really steep and the airspeed being really high so it couldn't have been stalled.
I really wanted to say "descent angle and airspeed are irrelevant. If the pilot put the plane into a dive, gained a ton of airspeed, and then put the stick in his gut, then they were stalled." However, I dropped it.
So, are there subtleties I'm not considering? Could the stick not act as an angle-of-attack indicator (if I could position it precisely enough)? I'll try to clarify this post if necessary.
EDIT: Let's stipulate no flaps/slats, calm air, normal CG, and plenty of elevator authority.
Hope you get this figured out.