Message from @Human Sheeple

Discord ID: 584366067728777216


2019-06-01 12:58:51 UTC  

bricks weigh nothing

2019-06-01 12:59:05 UTC  

@Nico2020 So let me get this straight, you've got weight, you derive mass with gravity and you derive gravity with mass. Isn't that circular logic?

2019-06-01 12:59:30 UTC  

Mass causes gravity.

2019-06-01 12:59:31 UTC  

that's if the mass was in space

2019-06-01 12:59:44 UTC  

@Minotarus mass causes an acceleration does it?

2019-06-01 12:59:48 UTC  

but it's being pulled by an outside force

2019-06-01 13:00:03 UTC  

an outside acceleration

2019-06-01 13:00:11 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/584365581051101205/MassDefinition.png

2019-06-01 13:00:27 UTC  

@Minotarus Funny Britannica claims mass is the RESISTANCE to acceleration

2019-06-01 13:00:33 UTC  

quantitative means you can messure it to it's smallest portion.

2019-06-01 13:00:35 UTC  

This is in opposition to what you just said

2019-06-01 13:00:54 UTC  

So what's correct @Minotarus ?

2019-06-01 13:00:58 UTC  

Mass CAUSES acceleration

2019-06-01 13:00:59 UTC  

or

2019-06-01 13:01:02 UTC  

Mass RESISTS acceleration

2019-06-01 13:01:04 UTC  

Which one?

2019-06-01 13:01:14 UTC  

I don't said mass causes accerleration

2019-06-01 13:01:19 UTC  

omfg

2019-06-01 13:01:24 UTC  

I said Mass causes gravity.

2019-06-01 13:01:32 UTC  

It is called inertia, one of newtons laws

2019-06-01 13:02:07 UTC  

```Mass is weight times acceleration.```
```Because the accerlation is not Zero.```
```Mass causes gravity.```

2019-06-01 13:02:10 UTC  

Yes you did

2019-06-01 13:02:22 UTC  

No you have to understand what Mass is weight times acceleration.

2019-06-01 13:02:23 UTC  

Means

2019-06-01 13:02:51 UTC  

Before that you can't make those statements.

2019-06-01 13:02:58 UTC  

you could make the argument of a negative acceleration, but even then when a brick hits something, like that space wall of yours, it will rapidly decrease its acceleration on impact.

2019-06-01 13:03:33 UTC  

@Minotarus Does mass resist acceleration or does mass cause acceleration?

2019-06-01 13:04:01 UTC  

cause

2019-06-01 13:04:12 UTC  

You are not willing to understand it right?^^

2019-06-01 13:04:41 UTC  

So if you speed your car up to 200 Miles what do you do?

2019-06-01 13:04:52 UTC  

So if I have a one ton ship and a 100kg rowboat, I push on each of them with the same amount of strength, the one ton ship will accelerate more will it?

2019-06-01 13:04:56 UTC  
2019-06-01 13:05:15 UTC  

No...

2019-06-01 13:05:22 UTC  

The Mass will be greater.

2019-06-01 13:05:29 UTC  

Then mass does not cause acceleration does it?

2019-06-01 13:05:37 UTC  

Nobody said that

2019-06-01 13:05:38 UTC  

Well then that's your gravity fried then.

2019-06-01 13:05:41 UTC  

In any way.

2019-06-01 13:06:01 UTC  

You are refusing to understand do you?

2019-06-01 13:06:38 UTC  

And one thing

2019-06-01 13:06:44 UTC  

No it is you who doesn't understand you have cognitive dissonance, you have this arbitrary unit called mass, this invisible elastic band you call gravity, neither of which you can define and clearly contradcit one another.