Message from @HyperBaroque

Discord ID: 544234894872543265


2019-02-10 19:07:45 UTC  

Remember...gravity has never been proven. It is still only a theory. Your conclusions are based on assumptions.

2019-02-10 19:08:16 UTC  

True about gravity being a (working) theory.

2019-02-10 19:09:33 UTC  

<@484198784901840897> @HyperBaroque Please research and look at the Selenilion Eclipse.

2019-02-10 19:10:07 UTC  

Engineers still use even rough constants for force of gravity, such as just simply 9.8m/s^2 , and get things done. So even though gravity is "just" a theory, it is a working one.

2019-02-10 19:10:32 UTC  

You do knoe electromagnetism is also a thepry right gwench?

2019-02-10 19:10:38 UTC  

Explain how it’s possible for a lunar Selenilion eclipse can occurs when the moon and sun are on opposite horizons at the same time.

2019-02-10 19:11:08 UTC  

>__>

2019-02-10 19:11:42 UTC  

I would really like a good explanation on the Selenilion eclipse too

2019-02-10 19:11:51 UTC  

@DrPeper Of course. A Tesla theory. The greatest mind that ever existed.

2019-02-10 19:12:00 UTC  

Wat

2019-02-10 19:12:02 UTC  

No

2019-02-10 19:12:08 UTC  

No?

2019-02-10 19:12:29 UTC  

Electromagnetism is not tesla's theory

2019-02-10 19:13:02 UTC  

Sorry. No. Tesla used that theory for his many inventions.

2019-02-10 19:13:28 UTC  

I know

2019-02-10 19:13:37 UTC  

But tesla disnt come up with it

2019-02-10 19:13:50 UTC  

Or most of the break throughs in it

2019-02-10 19:14:00 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/544234601221062666/image0.png

2019-02-10 19:14:55 UTC  

Yes, i am aware of a magnetic field

2019-02-10 19:15:10 UTC  

Even the electron itself is just a theory, one can't really prove the existence of an electron in a final, ultimate way. You can infer an electron's presence, though, and use that inference to get predictable results out of everything from conductive materials, to chemistry, to color applications.

2019-02-10 19:15:24 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/544234954465214475/image1.gif

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/544234954993958934/image0.jpg

2019-02-10 19:17:28 UTC  

The Selenilion eclipse is where the moon and sun are on opposite horizons from each other. Very rare.

2019-02-10 19:17:31 UTC  

9.8mps squared is the effect

2019-02-10 19:17:34 UTC  

not the cause

2019-02-10 19:18:08 UTC  

*9.81

2019-02-10 19:18:16 UTC  

However the shadow that eclipses the moon starts from the top and migrates downward. Please explain how that is even possible.

2019-02-10 19:19:43 UTC  

i would like to see the data shows the acceleration was tested on every square foot at sea level. i remember reading articles saying there is places on earth where the acceleration did not match the standard model and scienctist were baffled by it for decades and only recently have the come up with guesses (thats right guess work) on how that could be.

2019-02-10 19:19:54 UTC  

Atmospheric refraction? That’s a Yuuuge stretch and we both know it.

2019-02-10 19:20:18 UTC  

Could say he is deflecting 😏

2019-02-10 19:20:54 UTC  

anyways, gravity is a theory. you can measure it. great. i can measure the speed of a car but if i dont look under the hood i dont know whats running it

2019-02-10 19:21:04 UTC  

<@484198784901840897> Are you suggesting in this instance, the moon is a mirage? 😂

2019-02-10 19:21:22 UTC  

i know a clock tells us time. if i never looked inside one would i know how it worked?

2019-02-10 19:21:24 UTC  

He is deflecting

2019-02-10 19:21:45 UTC  

@DrPeper i got the joke

2019-02-10 19:22:00 UTC  

does light bend up then back down to your eyes thousands and thousands of feet?

2019-02-10 19:22:07 UTC  

@DrPeper is so punny. 🙄

2019-02-10 19:22:14 UTC  

cuz thats what you propse with no working model

2019-02-10 19:22:14 UTC  

Yup

2019-02-10 19:22:22 UTC  

That twas the idea