Message from @raspberry
Discord ID: 596539740476669952
And I'm pretty sure gravity is in the equation
Gravity is used? Or an equation?
Does an equation explain a cause?
it's not *exactly* i guess, it's the rate at which things fall that's used
So its not gravity
Its a mathematical equation
Got it.
Gtg. Bbl.
buoyancy doesn't rely on the theory of gravity no
bai
Well the g in the equation is gravity
it's the rate at which things fall
globe earthers give it the letter "g" because they think it's caused by gravity tho
If gravity wasn't in the equation then why are the tests accurate
Also boyancy is the tendency for an abject to float
ye
gravity isn't in the equation bc gravity is nearly unobservable, if it exists at all
Please explain why things fall if not for gravity
and tests still end up accurate without it
well fe has an alternate description
on a globe, all matter attracts all other: the acceleration is g = -GM/r^2. on fe, the acceleration is more universal, something like: g = -9.8 m/s^2
Is it not obvious that the earth is round? Look at the sun or the moon setting below the horizon
Or other things
normally the sun and moon sets behind mountains and buildings
which would happen either way idk
Um
the way the sun sets halfway over the ocean is weird... but personally i've never seen that
I have
I've seen it go completely below the horizon
i believe it happens. but it's just not that it happens every day
And hours later it comes up on the other side
you'd have to be surrounded by water on both sides o:
or maybe one side is over buildings/mountains but either way
Not really
i believe it happens sometimes
it might be refraction, idk exactly what it is yet
Even if I was surrounded by mountains that wouldnt explain how it sets on one side and rises on the other
i imagine with mountains it just goes sideways until it moves past the mountains
Come on
Isn't it obvious
IDK agree to disagree :p