Message from @Ronin
Discord ID: 625430992550625311
space is real
tbh if space didn't exist it might make me less nihilistic because space is terrifying man
What is happening here?
what's your point @Teddy
I would like to live in the world the flat earthers picture
@TheVanishGuy No, is there any tests proving that there was nothing reflecting the moon before it? Are people not skeptical?
like one gamma ray burst near earth and bam we incinirated
what do you mean
gravity is an abstraction of 'rate of fall'. if you're talking about gravitational force, do you mean Einsteinian or Newtonian?
are you saying that reflector was there before we put it in
somebody have been watching kurtgezat @CTRLRetro
Right first off what is everyone beliefs here? Im getting confused
Globe
yes i watch loads of him but i also know bits and bobs anyway
you can reflect w/o a reflector Vanishguy
I used to want to be an astrophysicist
but then maths
according to the people of the server I am a fanatical materialist with a little bit of egalitarian mayby
they all dont know anything
idk
am not good at maths
flat earth confirmed
I may have 1 unspet althority point
No one gonna make life easy for me then.
@TheVanishGuy Yes, lasers weren't widely available at that time. Only NASA would know if there was a reflector there
so your point is, from what i understand
i get that reference go for xenophile vit
bouyancy is a byproduct of Gravity? you're not even using mainstream science w/ that claim
either n1 alines
aliens*
or there was a natural thing that reflected there
Xenophile? hmmmm
Without gravitt, buoyancy doesnt exist
what is it
@Ronin get's it
you need a vectorial acceleration force for it to exist
@Teddy even if they were none would be powerful or accurate enough to go to a meter squared cube on the moon and back.
natural Vanish
Archimedes' principle states that the upward buoyant force that is exerted on a body immersed in a fluid, whether fully or partially submerged, is equal to the weight of the fluid that the body displaces and acts in the upward direction at the center of mass of the displaced fluid.[1] Archimedes' principle is a law of physics fundamental to fluid mechanics. It was formulated by Archimedes of Syracuse.[2]