Message from @Hamburger Guy

Discord ID: 564176142135721995


2019-04-06 19:51:49 UTC  

@CrybabyPanic Force is mass x acceleration correct?

2019-04-06 19:51:54 UTC  

yes

2019-04-06 19:51:58 UTC  

waiyt no

2019-04-06 19:52:02 UTC  

that's weight

2019-04-06 19:52:08 UTC  

Yea

2019-04-06 19:52:09 UTC  

wat yes

2019-04-06 19:52:10 UTC  

yes

2019-04-06 19:52:26 UTC  

Oh oh

2019-04-06 19:52:51 UTC  

@CrybabyPanic So can you please show me a scientific method experiment where I can manipulate an independent variable, MASS, to show a change in the dependent variable ACCELERATION and I can see a cause and effect relationship please?

2019-04-06 19:53:10 UTC  

Dude it's weight

2019-04-06 19:53:27 UTC  

its force

2019-04-06 19:53:30 UTC  

I got it confused

2019-04-06 19:53:39 UTC  

force and weight

2019-04-06 19:53:47 UTC  

just say force idk

2019-04-06 19:53:59 UTC  

Use a kitchen weight thing

2019-04-06 19:54:14 UTC  

@Human Sheeple the dependant variable is force right?

2019-04-06 19:54:17 UTC  

or am I wrong idk

2019-04-06 19:54:20 UTC  

Or those arcade punching bags

2019-04-06 19:54:21 UTC  

because that's what changing

2019-04-06 19:54:25 UTC  

if acceleration is constant

2019-04-06 19:54:34 UTC  

Punch it fast with a toothpick

2019-04-06 19:54:35 UTC  

and you modify mass

2019-04-06 19:54:42 UTC  

Punch it slow with a building

2019-04-06 19:55:22 UTC  

human sheeple you got constant variable and dependant variable confused

2019-04-06 19:55:45 UTC  

@YaBoiJeb constant variable say that slowly lol....

2019-04-06 19:55:55 UTC  

Well no you're saying that mass is the cause of acceleration, aren't you?

2019-04-06 19:56:01 UTC  

no?

2019-04-06 19:56:13 UTC  

I can throw a basket ball at 1 mph

2019-04-06 19:56:13 UTC  

@Human Sheeple they are separate independent variables

2019-04-06 19:56:15 UTC  

or 5 mph

2019-04-06 19:56:19 UTC  

wait I mean'

2019-04-06 19:56:28 UTC  

it can go from a standstill to 5 mph in 2 seconds

2019-04-06 19:56:30 UTC  

or 10 seconds

2019-04-06 19:56:34 UTC  

its the same ball

2019-04-06 19:56:39 UTC  

@CrybabyPanic said
``` the force that attracts a body toward the center of the earth, or toward any other physical body having mass.```

2019-04-06 19:56:50 UTC  

what he means

2019-04-06 19:56:52 UTC  

wait

2019-04-06 19:56:55 UTC  

I'm asking him to show experimentally that mass has it's own unique acclerative field

2019-04-06 19:57:07 UTC  

@Human Sheeple you mean gravity

2019-04-06 19:57:08 UTC  

he got mass and gravity confused

2019-04-06 19:57:17 UTC  

anyways