Will Anyone Else Miss FET?

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #120 on: January 20, 2011, 01:12:22 PM »
All that remains is for this to actually happen, and for them to get away with it!

Undoubtedly the Conspiracy will have safety measures in place--to neutralise any witnesses should the scheme fail.

I think we've adequately covered all of this. Anything not directly dealt with has been covered by extension. My reasoning is irrefutable; it is plain stubbornness to keep believing in this hoax.
Ego much?

I take pride in the selfless humility and warm-hearted modesty which characterise all of my posts.

I think we've adequately covered all of this. Anything not directly dealt with has been covered by extension. My reasoning is irrefutable; it is plain stubbornness to keep believing in this hoax.

You've covered individual phases of the flight plan, not the flight plan from start to finish.  Also, you "reasoning" is nothing but pure speculation (that is unless you are in on the hoax).

Why would I be revealing the Conspiracy's scheme if I'm part of the Conspiracy? ???

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General Disarray

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #121 on: January 20, 2011, 01:13:17 PM »
your "reasoning" is nothing but pure speculation
You don't want to make an enemy of me. I'm very powerful.

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #122 on: January 20, 2011, 01:25:09 PM »
Speculation based on the strictest, and thereby most compelling, principles of reasoning.

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markjo

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #123 on: January 20, 2011, 02:26:13 PM »
Why would I be revealing the Conspiracy's scheme if I'm part of the Conspiracy? ???

Since you seem to be pretty sure of the mechanics of Virgin Galactic's "hoax", I'd say that you've given too much away already.  Be gone, conspirator!  >:(
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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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #124 on: January 20, 2011, 11:51:37 PM »
Why would I be revealing the Conspiracy's scheme if I'm part of the Conspiracy? ???

Since you seem to be pretty sure of the mechanics of Virgin Galactic's "hoax", I'd say that you've given too much away already.  Be gone, conspirator!  >:(

Perhaps I am FES's inside man, working for the Conspiracy to supply FES with vital info. Had that occurred to you?

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Beorn

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #125 on: January 21, 2011, 10:49:25 AM »
Why would I be revealing the Conspiracy's scheme if I'm part of the Conspiracy? ???

Since you seem to be pretty sure of the mechanics of Virgin Galactic's "hoax", I'd say that you've given too much away already.  Be gone, conspirator!  >:(

Perhaps I am FES's inside man, working for the Conspiracy to supply FES with vital info. Had that occurred to you?

Wouldn't you have been dead by now?
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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #126 on: January 21, 2011, 11:06:04 AM »
Why would I be revealing the Conspiracy's scheme if I'm part of the Conspiracy? ???

Since you seem to be pretty sure of the mechanics of Virgin Galactic's "hoax", I'd say that you've given too much away already.  Be gone, conspirator!  >:(

Perhaps I am FES's inside man, working for the Conspiracy to supply FES with vital info. Had that occurred to you?

Wouldn't you have been dead by now?

It would certainly put my life at risk on a day-to-day basis, yes.

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #127 on: January 24, 2011, 04:04:23 AM »
I was just browsing the forum when I saw this thread and felt compelled to point out a fact that everybody here disappointingly seems to have missed. Thus, I registered and here I am!

The fact that I would like to point out is that a skydive simulator using wind/fans cannot in any way ever convincingly simulate free fall

My reasoning is as follows,

In sky-diving, or the simulation thereof, you do not simply "float around". Sky-diving is not easy, and it takes training to do it safely. The most minor twist in your angle compared to the wind will cause you to move, in some cases dangerously so. For those without the power of imagination to simulate the case I describe, let me show you:

Case 1: A man in virtual free fall. He's fine, everything works, doesn't it? No, because now we move down to..

Case 2: The man shifts his angle 45 degrees, the air presses against him in a wildly different fashion and he slams into the wall. Ouch. I wonder what would happen were he to shift a further 45 degrees..

Case 3: If you will forgive the comical interpretation, I should say that it's obvious that free fall simply cannot be simulated in this fashion



If we take another case, where he is in effective free-fall when horizontal, if he shifts his angle 90 degrees he would simply fall down to either get hacked to pieces by the fan mechanism, or if security measures were in place, fall down onto the fan and consequently feel gravity when he isn't supposed to.

It comes to mind that you might then point out that you could simply have the entire simulation capsule in free-fall, but this is not the case either. The only way to do that would be to have the capsule fall for several minutes uninterrupted either by dropping it from very high up, or dropping it down a very, very deep hole. Of course, I shouldn't have to explain why neither of these are even remotely feasible.
« Last Edit: January 24, 2011, 04:09:06 AM by silver »

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #128 on: January 24, 2011, 11:28:13 PM »
I suppose you failed to come up with another way to simulate free fall after all.

I guess we can all conclude that the Virgin Galactic spaceflights aren't a hoax anyways.

/end thread

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Supertails

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #129 on: January 25, 2011, 01:57:13 AM »
Oh no, they're still a hoax, we just have no proof and no idea how they do it/how it works.  In other words, it fits in perfectly with the rest of the Flat Earth Hypothesis!
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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #130 on: January 25, 2011, 02:25:20 AM »
That would be correct  ;D

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #131 on: January 25, 2011, 04:48:15 AM »
I was just browsing the forum when I saw this thread and felt compelled to point out a fact that everybody here disappointingly seems to have missed. Thus, I registered and here I am!

The fact that I would like to point out is that a skydive simulator using wind/fans cannot in any way ever convincingly simulate free fall

My reasoning is as follows,

In sky-diving, or the simulation thereof, you do not simply "float around". Sky-diving is not easy, and it takes training to do it safely. The most minor twist in your angle compared to the wind will cause you to move, in some cases dangerously so. For those without the power of imagination to simulate the case I describe, let me show you:

Case 1: A man in virtual free fall. He's fine, everything works, doesn't it? No, because now we move down to..

Case 2: The man shifts his angle 45 degrees, the air presses against him in a wildly different fashion and he slams into the wall. Ouch. I wonder what would happen were he to shift a further 45 degrees..

Case 3: If you will forgive the comical interpretation, I should say that it's obvious that free fall simply cannot be simulated in this fashion



If we take another case, where he is in effective free-fall when horizontal, if he shifts his angle 90 degrees he would simply fall down to either get hacked to pieces by the fan mechanism, or if security measures were in place, fall down onto the fan and consequently feel gravity when he isn't supposed to.

It comes to mind that you might then point out that you could simply have the entire simulation capsule in free-fall, but this is not the case either. The only way to do that would be to have the capsule fall for several minutes uninterrupted either by dropping it from very high up, or dropping it down a very, very deep hole. Of course, I shouldn't have to explain why neither of these are even remotely feasible.

Your concern is valid, however Virgin will counteract these forces using electromagnetism. The passengers' suits are electro-magnetised and covered in sensors. The walls and ceiling are also electro-magnetised. Any time a passenger begins to become propelled to one side, the magnets inside the suit and on the walls are activated accordingly. Thus, the passenger is kept in a state of equilibrium.

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #132 on: January 25, 2011, 05:51:56 AM »
You obviously have no idea what you're talking about. Let me explain why that's even more stupid,

First of all, "electromagnetized" is not a magic word. I gather that what you in fact mean is that extremely powerful electro magnets would hold people in position.

Even if we ignore the fact that such a system is virtually impossible to create due to magnetic fields that would intersect and jumble together when people move among each other, AND if we ignore the fact that all electronic equipment nearby would be utterly destroyed, AND if we ignore the fact that constructing such an extraordinary system would be far more expensive than actually developing the spaceplanes, it's still not an option. In fact, neither is a wind tunnel. See, I took the liberty to go to their website and check what the suits the passengers would be wearing look like.

Have a look,

http://www.virgingalactic.com/overview/experience/

Where in those tight, form-fitting pressure suits would you fit huge bulky electromagnets, and how in fact can you even imagine that suits that thin can shield someone completely from from winds moving in excess of 100 MPH? (terminal velocity)

So let's recap, the entire notion of a wind tunnel is now dispelled! This hoax seems to get increasingly impossible.

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #133 on: January 25, 2011, 05:58:07 AM »
The fanciful pictures Virgin post on their site bear little relevance to the facts of the matter. As it happens those 'suits' are merely the clothing material the passengers will wear. The suits will be worn on top.

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #134 on: January 25, 2011, 07:14:41 AM »
Aha, and where do you come by this interesting tidbit when all the info and statements that Virgin Galactic has ever released say that these are the suits that the passengers will wear?

Even if you -could- prove that, which you can't, it's of no matter since I disproved your electromagnetic theory. You'll have to come up with something that doesn't involve a wind tunnel before it has even a remote chance of working I'm afraid.

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markjo

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #135 on: January 25, 2011, 07:24:53 AM »
Your concern is valid, however Virgin will counteract these forces using electromagnetism. The passengers' suits are electro-magnetised and covered in sensors. The walls and ceiling are also electro-magnetised. Any time a passenger begins to become propelled to one side, the magnets inside the suit and on the walls are activated accordingly. Thus, the passenger is kept in a state of equilibrium.

You still don't get it, do you?  Skydiving and weightlessness are two completely different experiences.  The only way to accurately simulate weightlessness is with free fall.
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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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #136 on: January 25, 2011, 07:28:17 AM »
Even if you -could- prove that, which you can't, it's of no matter since I disproved your electromagnetic theory. You'll have to come up with something that doesn't involve a wind tunnel before it has even a remote chance of working I'm afraid.

But you haven't disproved anything. You'll have to come up with more than baseless speculations, I'm afraid.

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #137 on: January 25, 2011, 07:35:22 AM »
You still don't get it, do you?  Skydiving and weightlessness are two completely different experiences.  The only way to accurately simulate weightlessness is with free fall.

Again, Virgin's system is such that all forces will effectively cancel each other out. Thus, the passengers will feel no force acting upon themselves. Does this not sound familiar? For all intents and purposes, the sensation is identical.

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markjo

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #138 on: January 25, 2011, 07:40:00 AM »
You still don't get it, do you?  Skydiving and weightlessness are two completely different experiences.  The only way to accurately simulate weightlessness is with free fall.

Again, Virgin's system is such that all forces will effectively cancel each other out. Thus, the passengers will feel no force acting upon themselves. Does this not sound familiar? For all intents and purposes, the sensation is identical.

But the passengers will feel forces.  Heavy acceleration on the way up, several minutes of weightlessness and then heavy deceleration on the way down.  The easiest way for Virgin Galactic to do this is by doing exactly what they say that they will be doing.  That is, launching the passengers into a 100 mile parabolic trajectory.  To me that sounds a whole lot easier than inventing all of this exotic technology to simulate the experience.
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #139 on: January 25, 2011, 07:46:08 AM »
You still don't get it, do you?  Skydiving and weightlessness are two completely different experiences.  The only way to accurately simulate weightlessness is with free fall.

Again, Virgin's system is such that all forces will effectively cancel each other out. Thus, the passengers will feel no force acting upon themselves. Does this not sound familiar? For all intents and purposes, the sensation is identical.

But the passengers will feel forces.  Heavy acceleration on the way up, several minutes of weightlessness and then heavy deceleration on the way down.  The easiest way for Virgin Galactic to do this is by doing exactly what they say that they will be doing.  That is, launching the passengers into a 100 mile parabolic trajectory.  To me that sounds a whole lot easier than inventing all of this exotic technology to simulate the experience.

Are you suggesting launching a spacecraft into FET space?

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IOA

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #140 on: January 25, 2011, 08:39:54 AM »
But you haven't disproved anything. You'll have to come up with more than baseless speculations, I'm afraid.
How ironic...

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #141 on: January 25, 2011, 10:15:38 AM »
-snip-

But you haven't disproved anything. You'll have to come up with more than baseless speculations, I'm afraid.

Actually, it's the reverse statement that's true,

But I haven't proved anything. I'll have to come up with more than baseless speculations, I'm afraid.

And regardless, you seem to not have read my post.

Effectively, the magnetic approach is impossible with modern and predicted future technology well into a few decades more. Let's see what I actually said, shall we?

Even if we ignore the fact that such a system is virtually impossible to create due to magnetic fields that would intersect and jumble together when people move among each other, AND if we ignore the fact that all electronic equipment nearby would be utterly destroyed, AND if we ignore the fact that constructing such an extraordinary system would be far more expensive than actually developing the spaceplanes...

...and how in fact can you even imagine that suits that thin can shield someone completely from winds moving in excess of 100 MPH? (terminal velocity)

In regard to the first part, you totally ignored that part of my post. A habit that you seem to be quite fond of. Let me tell you one thing, to only refute part of an opposing argument and then ignore the rest to look like you're winning the argument is a really bad stategy, and merely shows how desperate you are to win the argument and not actually finding out what is correct. To prove that you read this part of my post, write "I read that part" when you respond next. As to the last part, I have yet to see any proof of why they would suddenly switch out the suits they have been advertising with all this time for something else.

However, to further disprove your theory, I will assume for a second that everything you have said so far is true, apart from this,

-snip-

Again, Virgin's system is such that all forces will effectively cancel each other out. Thus, the passengers will feel no force acting upon themselves. Does this not sound familiar? For all intents and purposes, the sensation is identical.

Let's assume for a second that the suit blocks all outside sensations, and that the magnetic field keeps people in place and moving exactly like they would in zero gravity. Would this feel like zero gravity to the people inside? No. The suit is kept up by the wind, and the people are kept up by the suit, we agree on that yes? People inside the suit would still experience gravity. There is no effective difference to "floating around" inside the suit, or standing on the ground. People are still being pulled down by gravity -inside- the suit, and since the suit is holding them up, they would experience being pressed down in the suit, regardless of them being stationary in the air.

This is it for your theory I'm afraid.

The only way to experience weightlessness is by being in a place with zero gravity, IE space. If people on board the Virgin Galactic flights experience zero gravity, then it's real.
« Last Edit: January 25, 2011, 10:45:28 AM by silver »

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markjo

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #142 on: January 25, 2011, 12:42:50 PM »
You still don't get it, do you?  Skydiving and weightlessness are two completely different experiences.  The only way to accurately simulate weightlessness is with free fall.

Again, Virgin's system is such that all forces will effectively cancel each other out. Thus, the passengers will feel no force acting upon themselves. Does this not sound familiar? For all intents and purposes, the sensation is identical.

But the passengers will feel forces.  Heavy acceleration on the way up, several minutes of weightlessness and then heavy deceleration on the way down.  The easiest way for Virgin Galactic to do this is by doing exactly what they say that they will be doing.  That is, launching the passengers into a 100 mile parabolic trajectory.  To me that sounds a whole lot easier than inventing all of this exotic technology to simulate the experience.

Are you suggesting launching a spacecraft into FET space?

Sub-orbital space flight (such as that proposed by Virgin Galactic) is perfectly compatible with FET. 
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #143 on: January 25, 2011, 01:46:52 PM »
But you haven't disproved anything. You'll have to come up with more than baseless speculations, I'm afraid.
How ironic...

I cannot possibly see what is ironic about this.

Even if we ignore the fact that such a system is virtually impossible to create due to magnetic fields that would intersect and jumble together when people move among each other, AND if we ignore the fact that all electronic equipment nearby would be utterly destroyed, AND if we ignore the fact that constructing such an extraordinary system would be far more expensive than actually developing the spaceplanes...

The red statements are nothing but wild conjectures. I do not wish to involve myself in wild conjectures, hence I have ignored them until you can begin to justify them. As for the blue statement: the cabin is not a real ship so there is no significant electronic equipment on board.

In regard to the first part, you totally ignored that part of my post. A habit that you seem to be quite fond of. Let me tell you one thing, to only refute part of an opposing argument and then ignore the rest to look like you're winning the argument is a really bad stategy, and merely shows how desperate you are to win the argument and not actually finding out what is correct. To prove that you read this part of my post, write "I read that part" when you respond next. As to the last part, I have yet to see any proof of why they would suddenly switch out the suits they have been advertising with all this time for something else.

To resort to a pile of ad hominems is a really bad strategy too. Perhaps you should instead engage in reasoned discussion like a grown-up. Also, how exactly does writing 'I read that' somehow 'prove' that I read it?

Let's assume for a second that the suit blocks all outside sensations, and that the magnetic field keeps people in place and moving exactly like they would in zero gravity. Would this feel like zero gravity to the people inside? No. The suit is kept up by the wind, and the people are kept up by the suit, we agree on that yes? People inside the suit would still experience gravity. There is no effective difference to "floating around" inside the suit, or standing on the ground. People are still being pulled down by gravity -inside- the suit, and since the suit is holding them up, they would experience being pressed down in the suit, regardless of them being stationary in the air.

How cavernous do you suppose these suits are? The passengers will not be rolling around in them; they will be a snug fit.

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #144 on: January 25, 2011, 02:12:38 PM »
The red statements are nothing but wild conjectures. I do not wish to involve myself in wild conjectures, hence I have ignored them until you can begin to justify them. As for the blue statement: the cabin is not a real ship so there is no significant electronic equipment on board.

Would you like me to quote almost every single post you've made in this thread with red color? You haven't made a single conspiracy statement in this thread that wasn't wild conjecture. Even elementary school will teach you in a very basic and practical fashion how magnetic fields interact and interfere with each other. It was not 'wild conjecture', it was simple logic. Not a fact, but a very high probability; magnetic fields would have to criss-cross across the entire cabin to try and counter these wind forces. From my personal experience with magnets, this will pretty much render such a contraption impossible or ludicrously hard to build. I would keep on piling up facts, but I'm lazy and I really won't bother. See the end of this post for why.

To resort to a pile of ad hominems is a really bad strategy too. Perhaps you should instead engage in reasoned discussion like a grown-up. Also, how exactly does writing 'I read that' somehow 'prove' that I read it?

If you think what I said was a 'pile of ad hominems', you obviously don't know what that is. What's marked with red text in the above quote is an ad hominem. I was merely pointing out that your method of argumentation was inherently faulty. I then remarked that it sure seemed as if you were merely trying to prove your own theory, and no amount of evidence against it would be able to convince you that you were wrong.

The reason for the admittedly funky part where I ask you to make a statement that you'd read it was because I was genuinely curious whether or not you were reading what I was posting, or just read a few lines and skimmed or skipped the rest. From your previous statements, it sure seemed so.

How cavernous do you suppose these suits are? The passengers will not be rolling around in them; they will be a snug fit.

Snug fit or not, so long as gravity is pulling them down and the suit is holding them up, gravity will be felt. As was stated previously, the only way to accurately simulate zero gravity is in effective free fall.

Anyways, I tire of this argument. It becomes increasingly apparent to me that nothing will be able to convince you that you are wrong, so I'm only going to ask one question of you,

Can you think of or imagine anything at all that would convince you that you are wrong in this case?

If the answer is no, I honestly suggest that you read this page through, and consider if this applies to you.
« Last Edit: January 25, 2011, 02:14:09 PM by silver »

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IOA

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #145 on: January 25, 2011, 02:48:36 PM »
But you haven't disproved anything. You'll have to come up with more than baseless speculations, I'm afraid.
How ironic...

I cannot possibly see what is ironic about this.

Even if we ignore the fact that such a system is virtually impossible to create due to magnetic fields that would intersect and jumble together when people move among each other, AND if we ignore the fact that all electronic equipment nearby would be utterly destroyed, AND if we ignore the fact that constructing such an extraordinary system would be far more expensive than actually developing the spaceplanes...

The red statements are nothing but wild conjectures. I do not wish to involve myself in wild conjectures, hence I have ignored them until you can begin to justify them. As for the blue statement: the cabin is not a real ship so there is no significant electronic equipment on board.

Has someone slipped something in a drink of yours lately? The Flat Earth hypothesis is completely founded on baseless speculation. To accuse someone else of it when they actually have evidence is completely ironic and hypocritical.

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #146 on: January 26, 2011, 02:42:17 PM »
It seems he has nothing more to say on the subject.

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Ski

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #147 on: January 26, 2011, 04:14:12 PM »

Sub-orbital space flight (such as that proposed by Virgin Galactic) is perfectly compatible with FET. 
"Never think you can turn over any old falsehood without a terrible squirming of the horrid little population that dwells under it." -O.W. Holmes "Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne.."

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fluffycornsnake

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #148 on: January 26, 2011, 10:17:14 PM »
Sub-orbital space flight (such as that proposed by Virgin Galactic) is perfectly compatible with FET. 

It is possible but in the long run a simulation will be much cheaper. Also, the logical progression from sub-orbital flights is orbital flights. For this reason it is more prudent to perfect simulation technology early on, keeping the orbital experience consistent with the sub-orbital experience.

Would you like me to quote almost every single post you've made in this thread with red color? You haven't made a single conspiracy statement in this thread that wasn't wild conjecture.
Speculation based on the strictest, and thereby most compelling, principles of reasoning.

It was not 'wild conjecture', it was simple logic. Not a fact, but a very high probability; magnetic fields would have to criss-cross across the entire cabin to try and counter these wind forces. From my personal experience with magnets, this will pretty much render such a contraption impossible or ludicrously hard to build.

I assume you have not built a wind-magnet simulator, so arguing from experience seems a rather moot point.

Snug fit or not, so long as gravity is pulling them down and the suit is holding them up, gravity will be felt. As was stated previously, the only way to accurately simulate zero gravity is in effective free fall.

This would not be difficult to counteract with use of air-pressurised suits.

Can you think of or imagine anything at all that would convince you that you are wrong in this case?

Of course. If it were shown to me that RET is true then I would admit to being wrong.

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silver

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Re: Will Anyone Else Miss FET?
« Reply #149 on: January 26, 2011, 11:00:35 PM »
Can you think of or imagine anything at all that would convince you that you are wrong in this case?

Of course. If it were shown to me that RET is true then I would admit to being wrong.
[/quote]

How could that be shown to you? Please provide an actual example of proof that would be possible to acquire (assuming the Earth is round)