Message from @BurritoPlanet

Discord ID: 578213908016398347


2019-05-15 13:27:24 UTC  

And why slinkys drop top to bottom

2019-05-15 13:27:30 UTC  

While you're there

2019-05-15 13:27:36 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/578211885573472297/image0_1--.jpg

2019-05-15 13:28:45 UTC  

For a slinky to drop top to bottom, it must have a force pushing it down

2019-05-15 13:28:55 UTC  

Make all the excuses you like

2019-05-15 13:29:01 UTC  

burrito gave me that

2019-05-15 13:29:29 UTC  

burrito do u have any more videos or just that one is their a lot of them on youtube ?

2019-05-15 13:29:43 UTC  

I've seen people post lots of different ones

2019-05-15 13:30:45 UTC  

idk i searched for it and got like 2 or 3 that looked like they repeated it nd then a whole bunch that said cavendish debunked then a whole bunch of the balls on sheets

2019-05-15 13:31:08 UTC  

The balls on the spandex sheet is a different thing entirely

2019-05-15 13:31:34 UTC  

Perhaps you should just watch the experiments, look at the results and see if they are consistent with the masses attracting

2019-05-15 13:31:53 UTC  

how would i know if their was anything wrong with the experiment

2019-05-15 13:32:02 UTC  

You could try repeating it

2019-05-15 13:32:31 UTC  

Or you could look and see if there are anomalies in the results

2019-05-15 13:32:31 UTC  

is their any real science ones in a lab the one u gave me the guys got a 2x4 duct taped with bowling balls ?

2019-05-15 13:33:30 UTC  

afaik properly done lab experiments generally aren't presented on youtube

2019-05-15 13:34:31 UTC  

idk i feel like gravity is so important and their is like a couple videos maybe proving it maybe not

2019-05-15 13:34:50 UTC  

So the logical thing would be to repeat the experiment yourself and see what result you get right?

2019-05-15 13:35:07 UTC  

i dont have room for tha tin my house

2019-05-15 13:35:38 UTC  

Then I guess all you can do is look at other people's results

2019-05-15 13:37:11 UTC  

so ur convinced mass attracts mass due to mass?

2019-05-15 13:37:32 UTC  

@jeremy What's mass?

2019-05-15 13:37:33 UTC  

I'm just presenting some evidence that i've seen

2019-05-15 13:37:56 UTC  

It appears that when you do a test with sufficient precision, they do attract each other

2019-05-15 13:38:42 UTC  

HAMSTER WHEEL ZOMBIES: https://imgur.com/367s449
INSECTS WALKING IN CIRCLES: https://imgur.com/RrRVIgI

2019-05-15 13:39:16 UTC  

idk sheeple

2019-05-15 13:39:38 UTC  

all that math is too crazy for me

2019-05-15 13:39:45 UTC  

@jeremy Great so stop using it, it's there to try to say weight isn't weight because of murr glappity

2019-05-15 13:39:53 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/484514023698726912/578214979493298188/DeepinScreenshot_select-area_20190315045859.png

2019-05-15 13:40:22 UTC  

There are plenty of people who are willing to explain it to you

2019-05-15 13:40:29 UTC  

It does make sense if you listen

2019-05-15 13:41:50 UTC  

i just think their is a lot of stuff that determines what something weighs and i dont see how their could be a set formula for it

2019-05-15 13:42:17 UTC  

If you knew about the things that determine weight, couldn't you account for them?

2019-05-15 13:42:43 UTC  

maybe

2019-05-15 13:43:16 UTC  

science cant solve a 3 body problem and this weight thing sounds way more complicated

2019-05-15 13:43:36 UTC  

The 3 body problem is very maths-heavy

2019-05-15 13:43:37 UTC  

but idk

2019-05-15 13:43:59 UTC  

3 body problem is impossible

2019-05-15 13:44:01 UTC  

It's about what a system of 3 orbiting bodies will look like at any point in the future, based on their starting position

2019-05-15 13:44:10 UTC  

There's no analytical solution for it right now