Message from @morecheese please

Discord ID: 574970533746180096


2019-05-06 14:45:05 UTC  

And tides are due to tidal gravity

2019-05-06 14:45:12 UTC  

i can show u a water droplet curved that isnt falling though

2019-05-06 14:45:15 UTC  

Cohesive and adhesive forces pulling water molecules together

2019-05-06 14:45:17 UTC  

Hi ive just became a flat earther

2019-05-06 14:45:20 UTC  

surface tension can happen in a glass of water

2019-05-06 14:45:24 UTC  

Yep

2019-05-06 14:45:31 UTC  

But tides is something else

2019-05-06 14:45:33 UTC  

But your exact words were "I don't believe that water curves"

2019-05-06 14:45:47 UTC  

Yet, since droplets can curve, water can demonstrably curve too

2019-05-06 14:45:49 UTC  

I like how the earth is round

2019-05-06 14:45:50 UTC  

i dont believe a large body of water not in a container can curve let me specify

2019-05-06 14:46:00 UTC  

Now that's a lot better

2019-05-06 14:46:02 UTC  

lol

2019-05-06 14:46:07 UTC  

u guys are nitpicky

2019-05-06 14:46:17 UTC  

Language is important bud

2019-05-06 14:46:20 UTC  

yeah

2019-05-06 14:46:37 UTC  

so thats waht i believe if not for surface tension water doesnt curve

2019-05-06 14:47:05 UTC  

surface tension and gravity pulling the oceans to the center of earth are 2 totally different things

2019-05-06 14:47:11 UTC  

one is real one is a theory

2019-05-06 14:47:32 UTC  

Both are real

2019-05-06 14:47:37 UTC  

water doesnt curve its a form of oceanic force that keeps the water on earth and my third eye open

2019-05-06 14:47:53 UTC  

I mean if you don't believe gravity why would you belive intermolecular forces

2019-05-06 14:47:56 UTC  

What if oceanwater curves because of surface tension plus liquids forming themselves according to their container? In this case, the ocean floor itself

2019-05-06 14:48:29 UTC  

Gravitational force between masses has been measured

2019-05-06 14:48:35 UTC  

i would have to see an experiment of water in a container with no sides to hold the water in

2019-05-06 14:48:51 UTC  

if that can happen like it is on the globe then we will go from there

2019-05-06 14:48:52 UTC  

You'd need something the size of the earth to do that

2019-05-06 14:48:53 UTC  

Continents have "sides" you know

2019-05-06 14:48:59 UTC  

so this is all thoery then

2019-05-06 14:49:03 UTC  

Nah

2019-05-06 14:49:10 UTC  

u cant prove water can be in a container with no sides

2019-05-06 14:49:10 UTC  

We can do small scale experiment

2019-05-06 14:49:30 UTC  

We can then extrapolate and look at the earth itself from high up

2019-05-06 14:49:35 UTC  

the continents are sides ? lol

2019-05-06 14:50:04 UTC  

gambino are the continents sides of the container ?

2019-05-06 14:50:19 UTC  

No the earth itself is the container

2019-05-06 14:50:30 UTC  

There are no net sideways forces, only downwards

2019-05-06 14:50:49 UTC  

Why hello

2019-05-06 14:50:57 UTC  

Kinda like an arch doesn't have walls

2019-05-06 14:51:00 UTC  

@The Big Gambino Not entirely true, pressure gradients are homogenous on all sides for fluids

2019-05-06 14:51:03 UTC  

yeah so what is the small scale experiment that shows water in a spherical container with no sides