Message from @Umwhat

Discord ID: 604790445867925516


2019-07-27 20:48:11 UTC  

@Soldz (CF) He asked you a question that wasnt disrespectiv in any way

2019-07-27 20:48:17 UTC  

@Kyriam_ Yes. You just have to make it clear you can accept you were wrong on something.

2019-07-27 20:49:01 UTC  

We have numerous beliefs yet truthers.

2019-07-27 20:50:21 UTC  
2019-07-27 20:54:30 UTC  

Wait how where

2019-07-27 20:55:29 UTC  

Done done

2019-07-27 21:21:24 UTC  

The Cavendish Experiment is repeated at Universities all the time, and it was first done around the year 1800.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavendish_experiment

2019-07-27 21:34:54 UTC  

They've heard about it an disapprove it @Perfict

2019-07-27 21:35:13 UTC  
2019-07-27 21:35:49 UTC  

Who has

2019-07-27 21:36:12 UTC  

That sounds like a knee jerk reaction lol

2019-07-27 21:38:38 UTC  

*** *** That would be interesting, I would like to hear more. I would think that anyone who disproved that experiment would be eligible for some substantial rewards.

2019-07-27 21:39:11 UTC  

Yea really

2019-07-27 21:40:19 UTC  

I can disprove it easily if we, with small objects could observe gravity then things would look completely different on the earth we know

2019-07-27 21:40:28 UTC  

How so

2019-07-27 21:40:37 UTC  

things would just start rolling around towards larger objects

2019-07-27 21:40:45 UTC  

Theres friction

2019-07-27 21:40:59 UTC  

Have you ever taken a physics class?

2019-07-27 21:41:00 UTC  

so hanging it from a wire negates that?

2019-07-27 21:41:18 UTC  

Yea a torsion does

2019-07-27 21:41:18 UTC  

a building could easily then pull a smaller object

2019-07-27 21:41:23 UTC  

even over friction

2019-07-27 21:41:27 UTC  

No it can't

2019-07-27 21:41:38 UTC  

"no it can't" that's right

2019-07-27 21:41:46 UTC  

Gravity is the weakest of the 4 fundamental forces

2019-07-27 21:41:49 UTC  

we do not observe this to be true

2019-07-27 21:41:54 UTC  

Um but we did

2019-07-27 21:41:57 UTC  

hence cavendish is meaningless

2019-07-27 21:42:00 UTC  

That was the experiment

2019-07-27 21:42:11 UTC  

Why do things fall on the ground?

2019-07-27 21:42:42 UTC  

they realized the flaws in mass attracting mass and invented GR

2019-07-27 21:42:52 UTC  

Whi's they?

2019-07-27 21:42:57 UTC  

Who's*

2019-07-27 21:43:18 UTC  

the scientific community 🙃

2019-07-27 21:43:18 UTC  

I hope you at least know that was Einstein

2019-07-27 21:44:03 UTC  

Gravity isn't a force

2019-07-27 21:44:06 UTC  

*** *** Yes, if the strength of the attraction was that high, those would be possible results. But the experiment does not suppose attractions like that, it does rather the opposite and is designed to detect minute attractions.

2019-07-27 21:44:08 UTC  

and General Relativity doesn't disprove "gravity", it explains it

2019-07-27 21:44:29 UTC  

it disproves mass attracting mass

2019-07-27 21:44:39 UTC  

Epic Abe if you would allow me to pick your brain

2019-07-27 21:44:45 UTC  

What causes things to fall?