When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er

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Thermal Detonator

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #30 on: December 23, 2009, 05:31:47 PM »
Good grief, the Bishop doesn't even understand the most basic physics. Is the ball falling at a constant speed? No. So will it appear to follow a straight line trajectory to an outside observer? No.
Gayer doesn't live in an atmosphere of vaporised mustard like you appear to, based on your latest photo.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #31 on: December 23, 2009, 05:39:24 PM »
Good grief, the Bishop doesn't even understand the most basic physics. Is the ball falling at a constant speed? No. So will it appear to follow a straight line trajectory to an outside observer? No.

Rowbotham doesn't say anything about constant speed.

The speed of the ball is not even a concern.

Rowbotham says only that to an outside observer the ball will fall diagonally, which it does.
« Last Edit: December 23, 2009, 05:41:44 PM by Tom Bishop »

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SupahLovah

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #32 on: December 23, 2009, 05:42:49 PM »
Tom Bishop, do you understand acceleration?

The only way it would be a straight, diagonal line is if it was under NO ACCELERATION, only a constant velocity down with the velocity to the left or right carried from the ship.

But, because gravity (or the earth moving upward) is accelerating the ball (or toward the ball) at 9.8m/s^2, the velocity (or apparent velocity) is increasing over time, creating a parabolic path.
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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #33 on: December 23, 2009, 05:46:54 PM »
Tom Bishop, do you understand acceleration?

The only way it would be a straight, diagonal line is if it was under NO ACCELERATION, only a constant velocity down with the velocity to the left or right carried from the ship.

But, because gravity (or the earth moving upward) is accelerating the ball (or toward the ball) at 9.8m/s^2, the velocity (or apparent velocity) is increasing over time, creating a parabolic path.

The acceleration of the ball is not a concern. The only concern is that the ball falls diagonally as the ship (or train) moves.

When the ball accelerates it might appear to move at a steeper angle, but it's still moving diagonally. The only concern in the chapter is that the ball moves diagonally.
« Last Edit: December 23, 2009, 05:48:52 PM by Tom Bishop »

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SupahLovah

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #34 on: December 23, 2009, 05:48:55 PM »
As shown in the diagram.
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Sutekh

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #35 on: December 23, 2009, 05:49:14 PM »
Tom, there is a net force on the ball, gravity (or you're UA if you prefer). IT HAS TO ACCELERATE. the ball will follow a parabola. And so will your ball in the train you mentioned above.

Tom this is high school physics.
« Last Edit: December 23, 2009, 05:56:15 PM by Sutekh »

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #36 on: December 23, 2009, 06:01:19 PM »
Tom, there is a net force on the ball, gravity (or you're UA if you prefer). IT HAS TO ACCELERATE. the ball will follow a parabola. And so will your ball in the train you mentioned above.

Tom this is high school physics.

The parabola still takes the ball in a diagonal angle.

"Gravity" or the speed of the ball has nothing to do with what Rowbotham is talking about in the chapter. All he is saying is that the ball will fall into another position on a moving surface. The details beyond that are irrelevant for the subject matter.
« Last Edit: December 23, 2009, 06:04:39 PM by Tom Bishop »

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SupahLovah

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #37 on: December 23, 2009, 06:03:13 PM »
But have you ever read Earth Not a Globe?

Have you?

Quote from: http://www.sacred-texts.com/earth/za/za21.htm#page_62
CHAPTER III.
THE EARTH NO AXIAL OR ORBITAL MOTION.

IF a ball is allowed to drop from the mast-head of a ship at rest, it will strike the deck at the foot of the mast. If the same experiment is tried with a ship in motion, the same result will follow; because, in the latter case, the ball is acted upon simultaneously by two forces at right angles to each other--one, the momentum given to it by the moving ship in the direction of its own motion; and the other, the force of gravity, the direction of which is at right angles to that of the momentum. The ball being acted upon by the two forces together, will not go in the direction of either, but will take a diagonal course, as shown in the following diagram, fig. 46.


Seriously, is there any reason to continue reading when Rowbotham doesn't even know how parabolic motion works?
as shown in the following diagram
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Sutekh

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #38 on: December 23, 2009, 06:04:18 PM »
Tom, there is a net force on the ball, gravity (or you're UA if you prefer). IT HAS TO ACCELERATE. the ball will follow a parabola. And so will your ball in the train you mentioned above.

Tom this is high school physics.

The parabola still takes the ball in a diagonal angle.

"Gravity" or the speed of the ball has nothing to do with what Rowbotham is talking about in the chapter. All he is saying is that the ball will fall into another position on a moving surface. The details beyond that are irrelevant for the subject matter.

His picture is a diagonal!!! and you are backtracking, above you said a ball in a moving trian moves diagonally. Now you admit it doesn't ?!?

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #39 on: December 23, 2009, 06:05:12 PM »
as shown in the following diagram

The chapter is not about gravity, the speed of the ball through the air, or any of that. Just the fact that it will move diagonally to another position on a moving surface.

Quote
HIs picture is a diagonal!!!

So is parabolic motion.

Quote
Now you admit it doesn't ?!?

I didn't say that it doesn't move diagonally. I've been saying that it does.

If we add acceleration into the mix it's still moving diagonally to that same different landing point. It's just moving at a steeper angle as it accelerates.

Parabolic motion is irrelevant for the purposes of the chapter. The only thing relevant is that the ball moves diagonally to another point.
« Last Edit: December 23, 2009, 06:18:38 PM by Tom Bishop »

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Sutekh

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #40 on: December 23, 2009, 06:06:02 PM »
as shown in the following diagram

The chapter is not about gravity, the speed of the ball through the air, or any of that. Just the fact that it will move diagonally to another position on a moving surface.

Quote
HIs picture is a diagonal!!!

So is parabolic motion.

parabolic motion is not a diagonal. parabolic motion is in the shape of a parabola.

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SupahLovah

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #41 on: December 23, 2009, 06:06:46 PM »
Which is horizontal, as well as diagonal, but NEVER vertical.
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dim

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #42 on: December 23, 2009, 11:45:49 PM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

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Sutekh

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #43 on: December 24, 2009, 12:05:00 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

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dim

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #44 on: December 24, 2009, 12:22:45 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

Seriously, ball travels from point A to point B. And if to draw a line between them it will be diagonal, taking in account straight horizon line.

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Optimus Prime

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #45 on: December 24, 2009, 01:38:59 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

Seriously, ball travels from point A to point B. And if to draw a line between them it will be diagonal, taking in account straight horizon line.
Dyslexics are teople poo!

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dim

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #46 on: December 24, 2009, 01:58:51 AM »
Is that a basset? Favorite dog of my friend, friend is a girl. And she is weird. Can't stop loving her thru the pain and glory.

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Sutekh

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #47 on: December 24, 2009, 03:34:13 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

Seriously, ball travels from point A to point B. And if to draw a line between them it will be diagonal, taking in account straight horizon line.

Dim, if I throw a ball up in the air then catch it, whilst riding along on a train at constant speed, will a ground based observer see the ball move in a diagonal line or a parabola?

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dim

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #48 on: December 24, 2009, 04:51:01 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

Seriously, ball travels from point A to point B. And if to draw a line between them it will be diagonal, taking in account straight horizon line.

Dim, if I throw a ball up in the air then catch it, whilst riding along on a train at constant speed, will a ground based observer see the ball move in a diagonal line or a parabola?

It has nothing to do with parabolla. Parallax in that chapter tell us about motionless of Earth.
I expect that ground based observer will see a parabolic motion, but Parallax wasn't wrong. He just entered spot A and spot B where the ball will finish it's travel. And the line will be diagonal if we draw it.

So, let's just discuss the experiment and not just stuff that is unsignificant for the experiment.

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Thermal Detonator

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #49 on: December 24, 2009, 05:35:47 AM »
Dim, you're really living up to your name. If I get in a car and drive from one side of a parking lot to the other by going round the perimeter, you can draw a straight line between where I started and where I finished, but that doesn't describe the path I took. Same with Rowbottom's ball. He claims a straight line is the path it takes. He is wrong.
Gayer doesn't live in an atmosphere of vaporised mustard like you appear to, based on your latest photo.

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dim

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #50 on: December 24, 2009, 06:08:58 AM »
Dim, you're really living up to your name. If I get in a car and drive from one side of a parking lot to the other by going round the perimeter, you can draw a straight line between where I started and where I finished, but that doesn't describe the path I took. Same with Rowbottom's ball. He claims a straight line is the path it takes. He is wrong.

He doesn't claim for straght line. His experiment was conducted to show us something else.

You can't implement car here. Parallax showing real physics, where in such conditions body will path from and to.

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markjo

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #51 on: December 24, 2009, 06:50:37 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

Seriously, ball travels from point A to point B. And if to draw a line between them it will be diagonal, taking in account straight horizon line.

Seriously, drawing a line from the start point to the end point is not the same thing as tracing the path that the ball actually takes.
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
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Optimus Prime

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #52 on: December 24, 2009, 11:08:06 AM »
You guys, lost to Tom Bishop here this time, and may be again and again. What makeing you deny that river that flows in you!?

He explained very well. And this funky diagram shows that Earth has no motion. Which is cant be applied with RE.

seriously. a parabola is not a diagonal line.

Seriously, ball travels from point A to point B. And if to draw a line between them it will be diagonal, taking in account straight horizon line.

Seriously, drawing a line from the start point to the end point is not the same thing as tracing the path that the ball actually takes.

EXPERIMENT 8 -> lolz

/thread
« Last Edit: December 24, 2009, 11:09:56 AM by Optimus Prime »
Dyslexics are teople poo!

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #53 on: December 25, 2009, 02:42:51 AM »
Seriously, drawing a line from the start point to the end point is not the same thing as tracing the path that the ball actually takes.

The chapter isn't discussing the path the ball actually takes. It's not a discussion about the speed of the ball through the air. It's discussing how its resting place position will be displaced. The concept of parabola is irrelevant to the reader.

The only thing which matters is that the position will be displaced.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2009, 03:31:24 AM by Tom Bishop »

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markjo

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #54 on: December 25, 2009, 09:05:36 AM »
Seriously, drawing a line from the start point to the end point is not the same thing as tracing the path that the ball actually takes.

The chapter isn't discussing the path the ball actually takes. It's not a discussion about the speed of the ball through the air. It's discussing how its resting place position will be displaced. The concept of parabola is irrelevant to the reader.

The only thing which matters is that the position will be displaced.

OK Tom, let's say for the sake of argument that it's the final displacement of the ball that's the important part.  How do you explain this little gem 2 pages later?
Quote from: http://www.sacred-texts.com/earth/za/za21.htm#page_62
Let the ball be thrown upwards from the mast-head of a stationary ship, and it will fall back to the mast-head, and pass downwards to the foot of the mast. The same result would follow if the ball were thrown upwards from the mouth of a mine, or the top of a tower, on a stationary earth. Now put the ship in motion, and let the ball be thrown upwards. It will, as in the first instance, partake of the two motions--the upward or vertical, A, C, and the horizontal, A, B, as shown in fig. 47; but


FIG. 47.

because the two motions act conjointly, the ball will take the diagonal direction, A, D. By the time the ball has arrived at

p. 65

[paragraph continues] D, the ship will have reached the position, 13; and now, as the two forces will have been expended, the ball will begin to fall, by the force of gravity alone, in the vertical direction, D, B, H; but during its fall towards H, the ship will have passed on to the position S, leaving the ball at H, a given distance behind it.

What caused the force of the ball's horizontal motion to be expended at point D?   I've brought this up several times before and have yet to receive a satisfactory explanation and I will keep bringing it up until I do receive one. 
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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #55 on: December 25, 2009, 09:48:02 AM »
In the Victorian Age motion and gravity were often referred to as forces.

Another irrelevant nitpick.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2009, 09:52:46 AM by Tom Bishop »

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #56 on: December 25, 2009, 10:04:54 AM »
Rowbotham is actually talking about acceleration leaving the ball behind.

Next he shows a drawing of the a train accelerating and leaving the ball behind:



As you can see from the spacing, the train is accelerating.

He also gives the following antidote:

    The same phenomenon would be observed in a circus, during the performance of a juggler on horseback, were it not that the balls employed are thrown more or less forward, according to the rapidity of the horse's motion. The juggler standing in the ring, on the solid ground, throws his balls as vertically as he can, and they return to his hand; but when on the back of a rapidly-moving horse, he should throw the balls vertically, before they fell back to his hands, the horse would have taken him in advance, and the whole would drop to the ground behind him. It is the same in leaping from the back of a horse in motion. The performer must throw himself to a certain degree forward. If he jumps directly upwards, the horse will go from under him, and he would fall behind.

When the horse accelerates the rider must throw the balls forward, lest they be left behind.

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markjo

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #57 on: December 25, 2009, 11:20:01 AM »
In the Victorian Age motion and gravity were often referred to as forces.

Another irrelevant nitpick.

I wasn't talking about gravity.  I was talking about the horizontal motion of the ball.  What causes the horizontal motion of the ball to be expended at the peak of it's trajectory?  Rowbotham said nothing about the ship accelerating so it must be assumed that the ship is traveling at a uniform rate.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2009, 11:21:48 AM by markjo »
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
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Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
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It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #58 on: December 25, 2009, 12:50:13 PM »
In the Victorian Age motion and gravity were often referred to as forces.

Another irrelevant nitpick.

I wasn't talking about gravity.  I was talking about the horizontal motion of the ball.  What causes the horizontal motion of the ball to be expended at the peak of it's trajectory?  Rowbotham said nothing about the ship accelerating so it must be assumed that the ship is traveling at a uniform rate.

It's clear that Rowbotham is talking about acceleration in the later examples. In the very first example (Fig 46) he correctly states that the ball will follow the motion of the ship. Later examples have the ship moving rapidly away from the ball. It's clear in that context that Rowbotham is speaking of acceleration.

Acceleration only took hold in modern usage with the word "accelerator," an automobile concept. It's likely that at the time of publication the word acceleration was not as wide spread since cars did not exist as consumer vehicles.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2009, 12:53:17 PM by Tom Bishop »

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Tom Bishop

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Re: When, why, and how long have you been a FE'er
« Reply #59 on: December 25, 2009, 12:55:45 PM »
I presume if he's not referring to it, he's not talking about it. From a zetetic point of view.

In the first example Rowbotham correctly states that the ball will follow the ship when thrown into the air. It's obvious that he knows of relative motion.

In the later examples Rowbotham states that if your throw the ball into the air while the surface moves rapidly away the ball will be left behind. It is clear that in these later examples Rowbotham is speaking of acceleration.

Since the word "acceleration" may not have been available to the reader, or available in common usage, Rowbotham must use these examples to convey the concept.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2009, 01:37:01 PM by Tom Bishop »