Message from @liks

Discord ID: 646399518019158017


2019-11-19 17:16:47 UTC  

what does that have to do with anything?

2019-11-19 17:17:04 UTC  

saying that earth should be a sphere bcs of gravity is BS. it's not science

2019-11-19 17:17:11 UTC  

has never been observed...or replicated

2019-11-19 17:17:14 UTC  

doesn't happen

2019-11-19 17:17:24 UTC  

I believe mountains are formed from plate shifting, though.

2019-11-19 17:17:45 UTC  

but if there is a natural effect of gravity to force large things into a globe..

2019-11-19 17:18:03 UTC  

why are they not "globing" ๐Ÿ™‚

2019-11-19 17:18:07 UTC  

it's rubbish

2019-11-19 17:18:09 UTC  

not science

2019-11-19 17:18:13 UTC  

because the theory of gravity states that gravity is a field

2019-11-19 17:18:16 UTC  

a "field"

2019-11-19 17:18:21 UTC  

which has a spherical radius

2019-11-19 17:18:35 UTC  

and?

2019-11-19 17:18:48 UTC  

could also apply to a flat surface earth. nobody said it was a disk

2019-11-19 17:18:57 UTC  

we have no idea what is underneath

2019-11-19 17:19:16 UTC  

imagine a magic 8-ball toy

2019-11-19 17:19:22 UTC  

flat spot on top of a sphere

2019-11-19 17:19:36 UTC  

Gravity could work with a flat earth if itโ€™s infinite

2019-11-19 17:19:41 UTC  

Or big enough

2019-11-19 17:20:33 UTC  

or, say, a longer cylinder.

2019-11-19 17:20:54 UTC  

Why not

2019-11-19 17:20:59 UTC  

but then logically, the sphere would have to be so big that all of it would be affected at the same rate

2019-11-19 17:21:11 UTC  

and that still doesn't explain how it would have formed

2019-11-19 17:21:23 UTC  

the earth being infinitely big makes no sense

2019-11-19 17:21:25 UTC  

though, according to mainstream science, a cylinder can't form that way.

2019-11-19 17:23:11 UTC  

true

2019-11-19 17:26:27 UTC  

The "attraction" of mass to a central point is uniform in all directions, so particulate would naturally accumulate in a sphere.

2019-11-19 17:27:44 UTC  

or, roughly sphere-shaped. Beyond a certain mass, though, the mass is dense enough to continually "fall" inwards, collapsing further into a sphere.

2019-11-19 17:30:06 UTC  

I read up on mountains and gravity and, apparently, mountains actually lose half their height by around 20 millions years.

2019-11-19 17:31:37 UTC  

*well then*

2019-11-19 17:35:08 UTC  

it's not science. has never been observed. cannot be replicated. not testable

2019-11-19 17:35:23 UTC  

it's just a supposition

2019-11-19 17:35:35 UTC  

we still don't even know what causes gravity

2019-11-19 17:35:41 UTC  

in 2019

2019-11-19 17:35:49 UTC  

ergo we can't replicate it

2019-11-19 17:35:52 UTC  

tune it

2019-11-19 17:35:55 UTC  

to test it in the lab

2019-11-19 17:36:10 UTC  

the fundamental cause is still unknown

2019-11-19 17:36:23 UTC  

Yeah, it is presupposition.

2019-11-19 17:36:27 UTC  

right

2019-11-19 17:36:39 UTC  

that's all it is