Message from @Human Sheeple
Discord ID: 564188779347181576
Yes.
sure so you agree that by changing either the density of the body or changing the density of the medium can cause a change in acceleration even direction of accelration yes?
Yes, a change in net force will change net acceleration.
cause = changing the density of something by attaching helium/hydrogen/deuterium/tritium/helium-3 balloons to ones self.
effect = changing in direction of acceleration
No
well force is a byproduct of acceleration, so I want to talk just about the acceleration please.
Cause: providing upwards force to overcome downwards.
But yes, lets continue
Yeah I'm not interested in forced thank you, I'm talking about sheeple's laws of accelerationism
Lol grabbity forgets to grab helium but somehow makes the atmosphere stick like velcro and prevents it from rushing into a empty space
acceleration is a fundamental component of force
force is not the cause of acceleration
@Hamburger Guy 😂
Try helium in a vacuum.
force is a byproduct of mass and acceleration
Density then
Actually, force IS the cause of acceleration.
9. WAVE PROPULSION: https://imgur.com/BOi8zNF
No it's really not
force is mass times acceleration
no mass yet acceleration occurs
So @Ivan Pavlovich I'm sorry you're wrong
What acceleration?
Do you see the object moving as a result of being shot at with a laser?
lasers emit light or infra red waves
Yeah, waves have energy and they can transfer that.
so it's not a force then is it
It is.
force is mass times acceleration, what's anything times zero @Ivan Pavlovich ?
zero
zero force yet an acceleration occurs
The LIGHT has 0 mass, not the object being pushed.
force is a byproduct of accelertiaon, accelration is not a by product of force
so can you please shut up about forces now you've been proven WRONG
?
F = ma
Therefore a = F/m
m = F/a
You could also say that a stationary cube has no acceleration, and their mass cannot be calculated as you cannot divide by 0 so it cannot exist
This kind of reasoning does not work
I haven't been proven wrong, but we might as well move on.
We're talkign about acceleration and @Ivan Pavlovich keeps insisiting a force is required, it's really not