Message from @Vitmar

Discord ID: 642145299690946582


2019-11-07 23:30:33 UTC  

the problem is that it's too close to us

2019-11-07 23:31:00 UTC  

I believe thats a drawing found somewhere

2019-11-07 23:31:02 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/538929818834698260/642144010344988672/vatican138_05.jpg

2019-11-07 23:31:17 UTC  

it's indeed interesting

2019-11-07 23:31:18 UTC  

Even the ancient egyptians had a fish god. Those ancient civs all have similar resemblance.

2019-11-07 23:31:26 UTC  

ye

2019-11-07 23:31:43 UTC  

Looks like light rays coming off the bottom

2019-11-07 23:31:46 UTC  

religion is interesting

2019-11-07 23:31:49 UTC  

With solar pannel wings

2019-11-07 23:31:58 UTC  

Just like the ISS

2019-11-07 23:32:18 UTC  

Or what we believe to be the ISS

2019-11-07 23:32:20 UTC  

but couldn't the middle be the sattelite's body ?

2019-11-07 23:32:32 UTC  

Could be i dont know

2019-11-07 23:32:44 UTC  

ye πŸ˜„

2019-11-07 23:32:50 UTC  

Its funny tho

2019-11-07 23:32:58 UTC  

I've put some sattelites in orbit at Kerbal Space Program

2019-11-07 23:33:03 UTC  

it's very cool

2019-11-07 23:35:25 UTC  

it's funny

2019-11-07 23:35:33 UTC  

I should be better at making rovers than sattelites

2019-11-07 23:35:47 UTC  

yet my rovers usually break in the first minutes of their missions ;-;

2019-11-07 23:36:09 UTC  

I am a disgracee for mechatronics ;-;

2019-11-07 23:57:14 UTC  

2019-11-07 23:57:27 UTC  

2019-11-07 23:57:35 UTC  

...

2019-11-08 00:06:22 UTC  
2019-11-08 00:07:03 UTC  

You should weigh a heavy object in and out of a vacuum chamber and see how much the difference is then use that as a range of error and apply it to whatever results you are looking at

2019-11-08 00:07:29 UTC  

Then, since you will actually have evidence to support your argument, you may be able to make a valid point

2019-11-08 00:07:45 UTC  

Until then, it is simply a case of you saying the air pressure is significant, and others saying it is not

2019-11-08 00:08:52 UTC  

2019-11-08 02:35:26 UTC  

They don't assume the distance or size, trig is used to calculate the distance in the first place, and they don't use the size, they use angular size

2019-11-08 02:35:31 UTC  

Unless trig is fake

2019-11-08 11:17:02 UTC  

@lapizzle You tried to prove gravity but forgot to factor in that air density is a factor that affects weight and thus a failed experiment. You're going to ignore the normal scientific procedure just to own muh flat earth? That's like going in an experiment where you're trying to prove that water always boil at 100 degrees everywhere then you don't factor in that it wasn't done at different altitude with different air density in the environment.

2019-11-08 11:35:38 UTC  

You would get a C- even if you do everything else correctly but forgot that one little important factor and it would be labeled as a failed experiment.

2019-11-08 11:41:15 UTC  

I don't understand how you guys never care about the scientific procedure when you're trying to prove anything to flat earthers. Buoyancy is a big factor that affects weight, you can't just scratch it off and say '' here's how much it would weigh because of earths gravity.''

2019-11-08 12:39:53 UTC  

they always reply that its because of buoyancy and not gravity. is there any results where the weight was measured in a vacuum so he can shut up?

2019-11-08 12:46:58 UTC  

also buoyancy is because of GRAVITY

2019-11-08 12:51:12 UTC  

but i think that he's right to a certain point. it can impact the weight but not a lot, are there any objects weighted at the equator and different place of the world in a vacuum chamber? @Jondar02 i remember we talked about this

2019-11-08 13:24:25 UTC  

πŸ‘ΊπŸ₯ΆπŸ‘¨β€πŸ¦°πŸŽ‰πŸ˜ƒπŸ‘§πŸ˜‚πŸŒπŸ™

2019-11-08 13:27:15 UTC  

Gravity is caused by the magnetic pull of the earths molten iron and nickel core just like a really big fridge magnet in simple terms