Message from @gohan

Discord ID: 646154503351173141


2019-11-19 01:00:21 UTC  

Oh cool

2019-11-19 01:00:27 UTC  

Yeah very

2019-11-19 01:00:35 UTC  

It’s really dense but it’s interesting

2019-11-19 01:00:45 UTC  

This has strayed far from flat earth topicd

2019-11-19 01:00:49 UTC  

*topics

2019-11-19 01:00:50 UTC  

Primes are neat

2019-11-19 01:00:54 UTC  

Uhhh

2019-11-19 01:01:07 UTC  

The channel is <#484516084846952451>

2019-11-19 01:01:14 UTC  

How are the north and self night skys different on a flat earth

2019-11-19 01:01:58 UTC  

Gravity is the best question to ask flat earthers about

2019-11-19 01:02:25 UTC  

You'll never get a good answer asking about gravity

2019-11-19 01:02:51 UTC  

Yeah ik. I’d be glad to hear a good answer

2019-11-19 01:03:27 UTC  

But the response is usually wrought with fundamental misunderstandings about gravitational forces

2019-11-19 01:03:50 UTC  

I knew a flat Earther in a different server who used Gauss's law of gravity to calculate the thickness of a (roughly) uniformly dense flat Earth

2019-11-19 01:04:57 UTC  

Doesn’t gauss’s law have to do with electric fields?

2019-11-19 01:05:43 UTC  

I could be wrong but i thought it was derived from coulomb’s law

2019-11-19 01:06:09 UTC  

There is a law for gravitation as well

2019-11-19 01:06:39 UTC  

It's derived from Newton's law of gravitation

2019-11-19 01:06:51 UTC  

Bc y'know, Gauss is everywhere in science and math

2019-11-19 01:07:00 UTC  

Fair lol

2019-11-19 01:07:18 UTC  

Gauss-Green is a particular thorn in my side at the moment

2019-11-19 01:08:29 UTC  

@mineyful what anime you watching

2019-11-19 01:08:43 UTC  

@catman <#484514023698726912>

2019-11-19 01:09:06 UTC  

You have fun with that lol

2019-11-19 01:09:30 UTC  

But I have no difficulty believing that Gauss law could be used to calculate the thickness of a flat Earth, when using the assumption that the Earth is a uniformly dense slab

2019-11-19 01:10:19 UTC  

Gtg to surgery soon, dm me if you flat earthers ever get a good answer for the downwards acceleration

2019-11-19 01:10:27 UTC  

Or @ me

2019-11-19 01:10:59 UTC  

IQ

2019-11-19 01:11:33 UTC  

?

2019-11-19 01:11:37 UTC  

lol

2019-11-19 01:11:58 UTC  

thats humor

2019-11-19 06:35:39 UTC  

gravity = duct tape for heliocentrism

2019-11-19 06:35:51 UTC  

apply liberally as needed to cover gaps in science

2019-11-19 06:38:10 UTC  

As I've said before in the other server

2019-11-19 06:38:36 UTC  

We should all be getting crushed by gravity if it can hold the whole ocean down.

2019-11-19 06:38:39 UTC  

Or

2019-11-19 06:38:48 UTC  

Gravity is self aware lol

2019-11-19 07:04:24 UTC  

I've seen that phrase a lot even with non-flatearthers that "Its amazing that gravity can hold down an ocean but let a butterfly fly" and the reason is, there is nothing pulling on the ocean, nothing pulling it away from the earth. If there was no gravity its not like the water would be flung into space, or fall down, it would just kinda float there. The fact that you can splash water in the air proves that gravity isn't that strong.

2019-11-19 12:18:58 UTC  

tbh... even if we assume the mainstream understanding of "gravity" is true...I don't see gravity being mutually exclusive to a flat-surfaced Earth anyway

2019-11-19 12:20:16 UTC  

so I don't worry too much about "gravity".

2019-11-19 12:22:27 UTC  

a key to truthseeking is holding ambiguity. you have to be comfortable not knowing all the answers or you never get anywhere.