Why would people spend a considerable amount of time writing such long posts and not once actually reach for the book whose data you are commenting on and see what science has actually been done?
Lowry, Richardson. Here:
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ja00723a029. This is how gas phase acidities are measured orgopete. Yes, heterolytic cleavage of an isolated alcohol molecule in the gas phase would be unreasonable. Ionic proton transfers in the gas phase are very reasonable. By the way, I imagine you can easily calculate heterolytic bond cleavage energy from homolytic one - the additional step is transfer of the electron, so just add/subtract electron affinities / ionization energies respectively.
Furthermore, Lowry, Richardson: "Brauman and Blair feel that the inductive effects have been misinterpreted in the past, and that alkyl groups are better able to stabilize both positive and negative charge than is hydrogen. They attribute this ability to the increasing polarizability of the alkyl groups as they become larger, and they give the outline of a theoretical interpretation of the effect."
OF COURSE! Have a good read of that amazing book. I loved it. They destroy quite a few common misconceptions about bla bla being bla bla slightly donating but here's an exception a to exception b which is in itself an exception c. Nature is simple if you understand it. I thought that was what you meant orgopete when you first criticized electronegativities in this topic.
orgopete,
re: your last post and the previous one where you replied to me. I don't mean to offend, but you seem to be somewhat out of touch with modern science basing on the atomic and bonding models you are using. I get very worried when people say "it depends on your atomic model". This is a 1920's statement. There is a quantum, proven beyond any reasonable doubt, model of atomic, molecular structures and bonding. I can't even quite get my head around all this Gaussian sphere, electrostatic stuff you're talking about. Also, there is a reason why you don't want to comment on my mention of NMR shifts and when I ask you to come up with an I'm-too-old argument. What? The reason is you know you are wrong about your order of electronegativity or at least I hope so. NMR shifts for H-C-X systems are ultimate proof of the electronegativity trends and in themselves perfectly, to no doubt, described mathematically. This must be a starting point in this discussion. Otherwise, you are pulling some qualitative discussions using old atomic models to explain a trend which is clearly contrary to the experimental data. That is, however big a statement this is, pseudo-science.
As to your rationalization of bond strengths, they are quite ok. My worry is, you are only considering the right side of the equation (stabilities of halide radicals), while there will be ΔG differences on the left side of the equation too. The difference will determine the dissociation energy. Again, I don't like this moving-electrons discussion, we must use a quantum, MO based discussion of bonds. Nothing else should ever again be allowed. Consider the energy differences between the bonding atomic orbitals: H2 2 x 1s at the same level, go to F - it's 2p actually lies lower in energy than H's 1s - hence that skewness of the MO's that results will give the electron dropping from an atomic H(1s) to molecular HF(2σ) more stabilization than was the case in H
2. This is precisely the additional "ionic contribution" that Pauling was talking about, without knowing exactly what he was talking about I guess. You must consider molecular orbitals to reach the correct explanation. Cl(3p) is essentially the same energy as H(1s) hence the same bond strength. Br, I 4p and 5p get higher and the "skewness" of the MO's works the other way. You also need to consider the increasing orbital - orbital overlap mismatch, which weakens the bonds as you go down the group.