Message from @Human Sheeple

Discord ID: 564186350056767492


2019-04-06 20:30:50 UTC  

@Human Sheeple how does that photo prove your first law

2019-04-06 20:31:18 UTC  

You can set pVg equal to your weight to see how many balloons you need to fly.

2019-04-06 20:31:26 UTC  

If you can make your body a lower density than the medium, you will float in accordance with archimedes principle

2019-04-06 20:31:42 UTC  

Ok and

2019-04-06 20:32:01 UTC  

@Ivan Pavlovich And I can make up math too, n = RM/I
number of retards in the room = Retardation factor x Morons / IQ of the lowest person in the room

2019-04-06 20:32:05 UTC  

Actually hold on I need to do something

2019-04-06 20:32:08 UTC  

Busy day

2019-04-06 20:32:15 UTC  

You think this is made up?

2019-04-06 20:32:19 UTC  

But yeah until I see scientific method experimental evidence of your "g" I'm going to discount it

2019-04-06 20:32:33 UTC  

You do realise that this equation is verified, right?

2019-04-06 20:32:41 UTC  

So verify g for me please

2019-04-06 20:32:55 UTC  

g is just downwards acceleration.

2019-04-06 20:33:11 UTC  

You can measure that by dropping stuff from a set height.

2019-04-06 20:33:25 UTC  

GRAVITY DROP SOMETHING FLIES UP: https://imgur.com/a/0gpjvOK

2019-04-06 20:33:38 UTC  

so g = about + 2 m/s^2 yes?

2019-04-06 20:33:56 UTC  

That's accelerating upwards isn't it?

2019-04-06 20:34:00 UTC  

Yeah thought so

2019-04-06 20:34:25 UTC  

That's disregarding air resistance, buoyancy, etc.

2019-04-06 20:34:46 UTC  

Sorry I want cause and effect scientific method experimental evidence, I don't want your beliefs

2019-04-06 20:34:52 UTC  

I am looking at acceleration here

2019-04-06 20:35:07 UTC  

I can show you very clear evidence changing densities changes acceleration

2019-04-06 20:35:17 UTC  

It's just a belief that stuff accelerates at 9.8 in a vacuum?

2019-04-06 20:35:30 UTC  

And yes, nobody denies that buoyancy exists.

2019-04-06 20:35:47 UTC  

Same as sitting on a chair can bring your acceleration to 0.

2019-04-06 20:36:03 UTC  

That brings us to Sheeple's 2nd law of accelerationism

2019-04-06 20:36:08 UTC  

2. CHANGING THE DENSITY OF THE MEDIUM: https://imgur.com/i0Cww6Y

2019-04-06 20:36:12 UTC  

```in a vacuum```

2019-04-06 20:36:20 UTC  

that's changing the density of the medium

2019-04-06 20:36:33 UTC  

Watch closely

2019-04-06 20:36:39 UTC  

they do not accelerate at the same rate

2019-04-06 20:37:14 UTC  

Ah yes, I've seen this before.

2019-04-06 20:37:15 UTC  

However I would argue the bowling ball and the feather have more similar body density to medium density ratios

2019-04-06 20:37:21 UTC  

in a vacuum

2019-04-06 20:37:29 UTC  

There's this thing called elastic energy.

2019-04-06 20:37:39 UTC  

Nobody's ever observed a perfect vacuum, only ever degrees of parital pressure

2019-04-06 20:38:02 UTC  

Nevertheless archimedes principle is not in violation

2019-04-06 20:38:11 UTC  

You are dropping two very dense objects in a very not dense medium

2019-04-06 20:38:34 UTC  

likewise if you drop a not very dense object in a dense medium such as the aluminium sheet in the container of sulfur hexafluoride, it floats

2019-04-06 20:39:07 UTC  

so before I address the feather, tell me, what provides the downwards force to being with?

2019-04-06 20:40:10 UTC  

force = mass times acceleration, can we deal with the acceleration please?