Message from @Yabai

Discord ID: 624417060818255882


2019-09-20 01:21:49 UTC  

yeah

2019-09-20 01:21:54 UTC  

that thing

2019-09-20 01:21:59 UTC  

Density happens to determine whether something sinks or rises

2019-09-20 01:22:30 UTC  

Gravity however is a cause that has yet to be fully understood

2019-09-20 01:22:47 UTC  

@generic discord user love u too =)

2019-09-20 01:22:59 UTC  

Lol

2019-09-20 01:23:00 UTC  

I see

2019-09-20 01:23:14 UTC  

River does claim that density is the reason why things fall, though

2019-09-20 01:23:21 UTC  

he made it quite clear in a past conversation with him

2019-09-20 01:24:27 UTC  

Okay, let me ask you this. In a vacuum, a feather and a bowling ball fall at the same speed. Why? @Citizen Z

2019-09-20 01:25:22 UTC  

Never observed, sawry 🙂

2019-09-20 01:25:42 UTC  

So you don't believe things fall at the same speed in a vacuum?

2019-09-20 01:26:01 UTC  

I'm not sure, it hasne been observed.

2019-09-20 01:26:26 UTC  

So what is your current prediction on what would happen in such a case?

2019-09-20 01:26:44 UTC  

I leave thories for NASA 🙂

2019-09-20 01:27:00 UTC  

So, you simply don't know and won't say anything on the matter?

2019-09-20 01:27:29 UTC  

A hypothesis is one thing, a test another, agreed?

2019-09-20 01:27:55 UTC  

Okay, and if I show you a video of a heavier, denser object falling at the same speed as a feather, what then?

2019-09-20 01:29:38 UTC  

It only proves that G is false, an that no resistance means objects speed falls at a similar speed, I've seen the video I think youre refering to.

2019-09-20 01:30:12 UTC  

How do you explain this, though, without density or gravity?

2019-09-20 01:30:28 UTC  

I think we can both agree that things don't just happen for no reason.

2019-09-20 01:30:42 UTC  

What is 'density'?

2019-09-20 01:31:06 UTC  

Mass per volume

2019-09-20 01:31:32 UTC  

You answered a question with a question...

2019-09-20 01:31:42 UTC  

Theres your answer then.

2019-09-20 01:31:50 UTC  

...what?

2019-09-20 01:32:10 UTC  

Things 'fall' because of a lack of resistance.

2019-09-20 01:32:27 UTC  

Why is the direction they fall down and not upwards?

2019-09-20 01:32:54 UTC  
2019-09-20 01:32:55 UTC  

There is no more or less resistance above an object suspended in the air either.

2019-09-20 01:36:59 UTC  

So, can you explain exactly how magnetism causes things to fall to the ground? in the video above, the person explained that all things can be magnetic, but he doesn't show how that causes them to fall, or what mechanisms are in place that create the conditions for that to happen.

2019-09-20 01:39:21 UTC  

And he himself also mentioned that there can be different types of magnetism, such that of magnets that only repel water, or a rubber balloon sticking to your hair. If this is so, what is generating magnetism that causes *all* objects on earth to fall at 9.81m/s, and not just some of them?

2019-09-20 01:39:43 UTC  

Has anyone tested this?

2019-09-20 01:47:51 UTC  

Also, while you guys may refute it, there are real flat earthers who believe that the earth is accelerating upwards at 9.81 m/s, as well as flat earthers like river that believe things fall due to different densities alone, as you do with the explanation of electromagnetism. All physicists agree that things fall down because of gravity, and they have worked out the math to prove it. I find that to be rather interesting.

2019-09-20 01:49:12 UTC  

If the earth was truly flat, why doesn't everyone come to the same conclusions when performing tests?

2019-09-20 01:50:24 UTC  

@Yabai there is no air resistance

2019-09-20 01:50:57 UTC  

Which question are you answering?

2019-09-20 01:51:29 UTC  

All physicists?

2019-09-20 01:51:33 UTC  

Fallacy.

2019-09-20 01:51:57 UTC  

I don't understand. What does no air resistance have to do with anything?