A glass dome in the sky? Really?

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rottingroom

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #150 on: July 10, 2014, 11:40:15 AM »
Here's what I know that I didn't need to read any fancy science books to find out:

- No kind of ice I've ever seen or heard of naturally forms into a perfect mirror
- When I do see a regular bathroom mirror and the light is on, I see a reflection of myself and the room, not a featureless blue
Is your bathroom filled with helium and hydrogen that is fully expanded?
You are at sea level pressure, why  would you even try and equate that to the very top of the sky?

So the bluish reflection is literally a reflection of that helium and hydrogen yet at night, we don't see reflections of city lights, we see stars. The same stars that were around before cities were.
City lights are not strong enough to be relfected back. the reflections are from the centre of the Earth and are focused up and out to the dome. Our eye sight or telescopes aren't that good to pick up piddly city lights.

but the lights that do cause appearance of the stars are strong enough even though we can't find where they are coming from in a plane?
You can't see where they are coming from because they are invisible to your eye from the centre until they hit something they can reflect off, which is the dome.
You can't any light unless it's reflecting of something.

If someone shone a torch side on to you, you only see the bean because of the matter in the air, like dust and water vapour etc that it reflects off.

lolwut?

We can see city lights just fine and they are less bright than your pretend light. This makes no sense. Is any of this going to ever make sense?
You can see city lights from a low flying plane. What's your point here?

That much brighter lights than city light should be much easier to see.
What do you mean brighter than city lights. What are you talking about?

This is a very simple conversation scepti.

Do I have to teach you how to read as well?

You said that these pretend lights are not visible unless they are reflected.

I said that we can city lights just fine.

You acknowledged that we can see city lights from a low flying plane.

These lights do not need to be reflected.

Your pretend light is presumably brighter, yet it needs to be reflected.

None of this makes any sense.

Answer my question about sun spots.

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rottingroom

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #151 on: July 10, 2014, 11:41:32 AM »
Here's what I know that I didn't need to read any fancy science books to find out:

- No kind of ice I've ever seen or heard of naturally forms into a perfect mirror
- When I do see a regular bathroom mirror and the light is on, I see a reflection of myself and the room, not a featureless blue
Is your bathroom filled with helium and hydrogen that is fully expanded?
You are at sea level pressure, why  would you even try and equate that to the very top of the sky?

And how do you know what the conditions are at the top of the sky?
By how things work down here with experiments and how we sort elements by man made means. All we are doing is what Earth does naturally from bottom to top.

What experiments are you referring to that show Hydrogen and Helium causing a blue colour down here?
I never said helium and hydrogen cause a blue colour. Where did you get this from?

You responded to a question about why the color is blue with some crap about helium and hydrogen. What other conclusion should we draw from your ramblings. Answer the question then. Why is the sky blue?

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Rama Set

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #152 on: July 10, 2014, 11:57:31 AM »
I never said helium and hydrogen cause a blue colour. Where did you get this from?

Weird because it looks like you did:

- When I do see a regular bathroom mirror and the light is on, I see a reflection of myself and the room, not a featureless blue
Is your bathroom filled with helium and hydrogen that is fully expanded?
You are at sea level pressure, why  would you even try and equate that to the very top of the sky?
Aether is the  characteristic of action or inaction of charged  & noncharged particals.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #153 on: July 10, 2014, 11:59:16 AM »

You said that these pretend lights are not visible unless they are reflected.

I said that we can city lights just fine.

You acknowledged that we can see city lights from a low flying plane.

These lights do not need to be reflected.

Your pretend light is presumably brighter, yet it needs to be reflected.

None of this makes any sense.

Answer my question about sun spots.
What do you think city lights are reflecting off? Have a serous think about it if you think light doesn't need reflection.

What sun spots are these?
When have you see sun spots through your telescope?

The only spots you would ever likely see are negative wavelengths of light blocking out small areas if that.
Show me some genuine sun spots.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #154 on: July 10, 2014, 12:00:31 PM »
Here's what I know that I didn't need to read any fancy science books to find out:

- No kind of ice I've ever seen or heard of naturally forms into a perfect mirror
- When I do see a regular bathroom mirror and the light is on, I see a reflection of myself and the room, not a featureless blue
Is your bathroom filled with helium and hydrogen that is fully expanded?
You are at sea level pressure, why  would you even try and equate that to the very top of the sky?

And how do you know what the conditions are at the top of the sky?
By how things work down here with experiments and how we sort elements by man made means. All we are doing is what Earth does naturally from bottom to top.

What experiments are you referring to that show Hydrogen and Helium causing a blue colour down here?
I never said helium and hydrogen cause a blue colour. Where did you get this from?

You responded to a question about why the color is blue with some crap about helium and hydrogen. What other conclusion should we draw from your ramblings. Answer the question then. Why is the sky blue?
I said the shorter wavelength of the spectrum makes us see blue. Stop making stuff up it doesn't help.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #155 on: July 10, 2014, 12:03:17 PM »
I never said helium and hydrogen cause a blue colour. Where did you get this from?

Weird because it looks like you did:

- When I do see a regular bathroom mirror and the light is on, I see a reflection of myself and the room, not a featureless blue
Is your bathroom filled with helium and hydrogen that is fully expanded?
You are at sea level pressure, why  would you even try and equate that to the very top of the sky?
I was on about his bathroom mirror at sea level with a light on, I didn't even address his blue.


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markjo

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #156 on: July 10, 2014, 12:06:28 PM »
City lights are not strong enough to be relfected back. the reflections are from the centre of the Earth and are focused up and out to the dome. Our eye sight or telescopes aren't that good to pick up piddly city lights.
Are you saying that there is a perfect vacuum between the center of the earth where these lights originate from and the ice dome?  If not, then it seems that this light should illuminate various particles suspended within the atmosphere as the light travels from the center of the earth to the ice dome.  In fact, it seems that if you're right, then we should see stars projected onto clouds at night.  Why does this not happen?
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Macpie

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #157 on: July 10, 2014, 12:07:26 PM »
Fine... No boiling, but rapid melting would happen. How does it help you? After looking up charts for the critical curves of helium I have forgotten that it is the very few materials discovered which are superfluids in very low temperatures and pressures, not gaseous. Massive fail on my side. But what does it have to do with keeping the dome solid? You have just posted a video where you claim that instead of being gaseous in low pressure, it would be a superfluid. How does it change the fact that such a dome would fall apart? Try to look up solid helium and zero point energy and think for yourself whether this was all made up when some scientists heard your claim that the dome is made of H and He, or was in works for a long, long time.

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rottingroom

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #158 on: July 10, 2014, 12:07:47 PM »

You said that these pretend lights are not visible unless they are reflected.

I said that we can city lights just fine.

You acknowledged that we can see city lights from a low flying plane.

These lights do not need to be reflected.

Your pretend light is presumably brighter, yet it needs to be reflected.

None of this makes any sense.

Answer my question about sun spots.
What do you think city lights are reflecting off? Have a serous think about it if you think light doesn't need reflection.

What sun spots are these?
When have you see sun spots through your telescope?

The only spots you would ever likely see are negative wavelengths of light blocking out small areas if that.
Show me some genuine sun spots.

1. City lights are various but a small minority of them are reflections but that isn't very relevant. My point is that we can't see the source of star light even though they are more bright. I can see a filament lit up just fine.

2. Show yourself.
« Last Edit: July 10, 2014, 12:09:21 PM by rottingroom »

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #159 on: July 10, 2014, 12:20:21 PM »
City lights are not strong enough to be relfected back. the reflections are from the centre of the Earth and are focused up and out to the dome. Our eye sight or telescopes aren't that good to pick up piddly city lights.
Are you saying that there is a perfect vacuum between the center of the earth where these lights originate from and the ice dome?  If not, then it seems that this light should illuminate various particles suspended within the atmosphere as the light travels from the center of the earth to the ice dome.  In fact, it seems that if you're right, then we should see stars projected onto clouds at night.  Why does this not happen?
The light is emitted through crystals as I said before, in the centre of Earth. It's a super low pressure that is filled all the time, like a vortex.
The light waves through those crystals converge over the centre and are reflected again and again around the dome.
The main source  light (the sun) is the lagest emitted light.
There are no clouds in the centre, just around it, like where we all live around the circle, so they're hardly going to be projected onto clouds.

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rottingroom

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #160 on: July 10, 2014, 12:22:04 PM »
City lights are not strong enough to be relfected back. the reflections are from the centre of the Earth and are focused up and out to the dome. Our eye sight or telescopes aren't that good to pick up piddly city lights.
Are you saying that there is a perfect vacuum between the center of the earth where these lights originate from and the ice dome?  If not, then it seems that this light should illuminate various particles suspended within the atmosphere as the light travels from the center of the earth to the ice dome.  In fact, it seems that if you're right, then we should see stars projected onto clouds at night.  Why does this not happen?
The light is emitted through crystals as I said before, in the centre of Earth. It's a super low pressure that is filled all the time, like a vortex.
The light waves through those crystals converge over the centre and are reflected again and again around the dome.
The main source  light (the sun) is the lagest emitted light.
There are no clouds in the centre, just around it, like where we all live around the circle, so they're hardly going to be projected onto clouds.

Refresh my memory, where is this place again?

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #161 on: July 10, 2014, 12:27:44 PM »
Fine... No boiling, but rapid melting would happen. How does it help you? After looking up charts for the critical curves of helium I have forgotten that it is the very few materials discovered which are superfluids in very low temperatures and pressures, not gaseous. Massive fail on my side. But what does it have to do with keeping the dome solid? You have just posted a video where you claim that instead of being gaseous in low pressure, it would be a superfluid. How does it change the fact that such a dome would fall apart? Try to look up solid helium and zero point energy and think for yourself whether this was all made up when some scientists heard your claim that the dome is made of H and He, or was in works for a long, long time.
It's a super fluid at that temperature. That temperature is what man can achieve down here, not what can happen up against a true vacuum.
Temperature is only relevant to us. A vacuum has no temperature. It where everything ceases to move. No more expansion or friction to create any kind of humanly perceptible temperature measurement.

The building of the dome is a natural Earth cycle using all elements of all density to the very last at the top.
The ice rim starts as a dense ice inner rim then gradually the air becomes more dense and nitrogen freezes , etc all the way to the dome foundation.


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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #162 on: July 10, 2014, 12:29:31 PM »
City lights are not strong enough to be relfected back. the reflections are from the centre of the Earth and are focused up and out to the dome. Our eye sight or telescopes aren't that good to pick up piddly city lights.
Are you saying that there is a perfect vacuum between the center of the earth where these lights originate from and the ice dome?  If not, then it seems that this light should illuminate various particles suspended within the atmosphere as the light travels from the center of the earth to the ice dome.  In fact, it seems that if you're right, then we should see stars projected onto clouds at night.  Why does this not happen?
The light is emitted through crystals as I said before, in the centre of Earth. It's a super low pressure that is filled all the time, like a vortex.
The light waves through those crystals converge over the centre and are reflected again and again around the dome.
The main source  light (the sun) is the lagest emitted light.
There are no clouds in the centre, just around it, like where we all live around the circle, so they're hardly going to be projected onto clouds.

Refresh my memory, where is this place again?
I can't be bothered to play your game. When you start being a bit more serious I'll oblige. I'm not wasting too much more time typing on you when you ask that question of which you are clearly in the mind of knowing.

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Rama Set

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #163 on: July 10, 2014, 12:31:16 PM »
You better find more bubblegum then.
Aether is the  characteristic of action or inaction of charged  & noncharged particals.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #164 on: July 10, 2014, 12:36:54 PM »
You better find more bubblegum then.
I'm all out of bubblegum, so you know what that means - globulite.  ;)

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rottingroom

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #165 on: July 10, 2014, 12:39:26 PM »
City lights are not strong enough to be relfected back. the reflections are from the centre of the Earth and are focused up and out to the dome. Our eye sight or telescopes aren't that good to pick up piddly city lights.
Are you saying that there is a perfect vacuum between the center of the earth where these lights originate from and the ice dome?  If not, then it seems that this light should illuminate various particles suspended within the atmosphere as the light travels from the center of the earth to the ice dome.  In fact, it seems that if you're right, then we should see stars projected onto clouds at night.  Why does this not happen?
The light is emitted through crystals as I said before, in the centre of Earth. It's a super low pressure that is filled all the time, like a vortex.
The light waves through those crystals converge over the centre and are reflected again and again around the dome.
The main source  light (the sun) is the lagest emitted light.
There are no clouds in the centre, just around it, like where we all live around the circle, so they're hardly going to be projected onto clouds.

Refresh my memory, where is this place again?
I can't be bothered to play your game. When you start being a bit more serious I'll oblige. I'm not wasting too much more time typing on you when you ask that question of which you are clearly in the mind of knowing.

It's not a gamey question. You said it's at the center of earth. Where is that?

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markjo

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #166 on: July 10, 2014, 01:12:00 PM »
The light is emitted through crystals as I said before, in the centre of Earth. It's a super low pressure that is filled all the time, like a vortex.
Have you personally seen these crystals or measured the pressure at the center of the earth?

The light waves through those crystals converge over the centre and are reflected again and again around the dome.The main source  light (the sun) is the lagest emitted light.
There are no clouds in the centre, just around it, like where we all live around the circle, so they're hardly going to be projected onto clouds.
But don't those light waves have to travel through the atmosphere in order to get to the dome?
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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rottingroom

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #167 on: July 10, 2014, 01:16:19 PM »
But don't those light waves have to travel through the atmosphere in order to get to the dome?

If you don't think it's possible for light waves to get past some clouds with affecting the light then how did these guys get your favorite drink past your favorite chips without getting wet?

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Shmeggley

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #168 on: July 10, 2014, 02:13:13 PM »
Here's what I know that I didn't need to read any fancy science books to find out:

- No kind of ice I've ever seen or heard of naturally forms into a perfect mirror
- When I do see a regular bathroom mirror and the light is on, I see a reflection of myself and the room, not a featureless blue
Is your bathroom filled with helium and hydrogen that is fully expanded?
You are at sea level pressure, why  would you even try and equate that to the very top of the sky?

And how do you know what the conditions are at the top of the sky?
By how things work down here with experiments and how we sort elements by man made means. All we are doing is what Earth does naturally from bottom to top.

What experiments are you referring to that show Hydrogen and Helium causing a blue colour down here?
I never said helium and hydrogen cause a blue colour. Where did you get this from?
Giess what? I am a tin foil hat conspiracy lunatic who knows nothing... See what I'm getting at here?

Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #169 on: July 10, 2014, 05:04:33 PM »
If light we see in the sky and believe to be the sun..........how come we can't see the sun on an overcast day? Why can you see the sun behind a cloud?

It doesn't meet the definition of a reflection.

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JimmyTheCrab

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #170 on: July 11, 2014, 01:43:02 AM »
@scepti, in your "model" why do we have sunsets?  Can you draw a diagram to explain.

Once you have done that you can explain why we have seasons.
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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #171 on: July 11, 2014, 02:05:01 AM »
@scepti, in your "model" why do we have sunsets?  Can you draw a diagram to explain.

Once you have done that you can explain why we have seasons.
I'll draw a diagram later. The sunsets are when the reflected light (sun) moves over the dome, away from your view through the thick atmosphere.

As for seasons. It's because the super glowing carbon at the centre loses and gains energy which drops and raises it.
This causes changes in the waves through the crystal prisms causing the light to shift angles of reflection.

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Macpie

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #172 on: July 11, 2014, 02:39:07 AM »
Quote
A vacuum has no temperature. It where everything ceases to move.

Correct, vacuum has no temperature. But things in vacuum DO have temperature, why not? Temperature has nothing to do with what surrounds a piece of matter, it is directly connected to the particles' kinetic energy. Actually stuff already present in vacuum in its stable state(I mean like a piece of metal, for which the preferred state in 0Pa and reasonably low temperatures is solid) will loose heat way slower than when surrounded by anything colder than it. If the state is stable, then no heat will be consumed in phase changes. There would also be no "lower temperature" molecules floating around to take some kinetic energy. The only way to loose energy would be through radiation, and it is a very weak effect compared to others.

Anyways, how would the dome form at all, as some elements require high pressure to become solids at all, even at extremely low temperatures?

And another thing, about your "glowing carbon" stuff. If it is in the center - why cannot we find it? There is no such stuff at the pole.

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JimmyTheCrab

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #173 on: July 11, 2014, 02:43:59 AM »
@scepti, in your "model" why do we have sunsets?  Can you draw a diagram to explain.

Once you have done that you can explain why we have seasons.
I'll draw a diagram later.
No, you won't.  You can't.

Quote
The sunsets are when the reflected light (sun) moves over the dome, away from your view through the thick atmosphere.
How is the sun  moving?  Why do the periods of light and dark change over the year, apart from for people on the equator?

Quote
As for seasons. It's because the super glowing carbon at the centre loses and gains energy which drops and raises it.
This causes changes in the waves through the crystal prisms causing the light to shift angles of reflection.
lol - nice 5th rate sci-fi.  You aren't really trying now are you?  Sounds like a dream you had after eating too much cheese.


How does this explain how different parts of the earth have different seasons at the same time?  Why is it winter in the UK when it is summer in Australia?
Quote from: mikeman7918
a single photon can pass through two sluts

Quote from: Chicken Fried Clucker
if Donald Trump stuck his penis in me after trying on clothes I would have that date and time burned in my head.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #174 on: July 11, 2014, 02:57:36 AM »
Quote
A vacuum has no temperature. It where everything ceases to move.

Correct, vacuum has no temperature. But things in vacuum DO have temperature, why not? Temperature has nothing to do with what surrounds a piece of matter, it is directly connected to the particles' kinetic energy. Actually stuff already present in vacuum in its stable state(I mean like a piece of metal, for which the preferred state in 0Pa and reasonably low temperatures is solid) will loose heat way slower than when surrounded by anything colder than it. If the state is stable, then no heat will be consumed in phase changes. There would also be no "lower temperature" molecules floating around to take some kinetic energy. The only way to loose energy would be through radiation, and it is a very weak effect compared to others.

Anyways, how would the dome form at all, as some elements require high pressure to become solids at all, even at extremely low temperatures?

And another thing, about your "glowing carbon" stuff. If it is in the center - why cannot we find it? There is no such stuff at the pole.
If you want to understand what I'm saying then you're gonna have to lose the fantasy space that has been battered into your head and the fact that you think a vacuum can have something freely moving in it. Until you get that out of your head, you'll nefver understand it.

Metal or any other thing cannot survive a true vacuum, it would be taken apart unless it's structure can resist it by being completely dense and sealed.

As for the pole. You don't know what the north pole is. You get told what it is. The pole that you know is most probably a massive ring around the centre of Earth that people think is the north pole centre, when it's not.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #175 on: July 11, 2014, 03:15:08 AM »
@scepti, in your "model" why do we have sunsets?  Can you draw a diagram to explain.

Once you have done that you can explain why we have seasons.
I'll draw a diagram later.
No, you won't.  You can't.

Quote
The sunsets are when the reflected light (sun) moves over the dome, away from your view through the thick atmosphere.
How is the sun  moving?  Why do the periods of light and dark change over the year, apart from for people on the equator?

Quote
As for seasons. It's because the super glowing carbon at the centre loses and gains energy which drops and raises it.
This causes changes in the waves through the crystal prisms causing the light to shift angles of reflection.
lol - nice 5th rate sci-fi.  You aren't really trying now are you?  Sounds like a dream you had after eating too much cheese.


How does this explain how different parts of the earth have different seasons at the same time?  Why is it winter in the UK when it is summer in Australia?
I think it's pointless wasting my time with you. Just stick to your globe and be done with it. You don't need answers and you are certainly not going to extertain any thoughts no matter what. If it goes against your indoctrination it's dismissed, simple as that, so why are you here?

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Macpie

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #176 on: July 11, 2014, 03:25:08 AM »
Sooo... You completely disagree with whatever both RE and FErs say about what we call the north pole, and "debunk" some of the most basic laws of physic, just like that? With nothing more than ideas? They are not theories. They are not even justified hypotheses. Good luck with that. I am really amazed how you can survive in the current world, as you see massive conspiracies and steaming piles of bullsh*t everywhere aside from things "you have tested". Is that "true vacuum" something you personally have experienced? Maybe read about somewhere? No?... What a shame. You have absolutely no base to claim it exists and behaves in a way you know. These are your ideas on how to explain stuff. Stuff that does not actually happen anywhere, mind you.

My take on things is that if some theory can be partially backed by evidence, and there is no evidence to the contrary of it, then it quite possibly may be true.
Example: a sample of solid cools down slower the lower the pressure of gas surrounding it is. It seems that no phase change will happen for the sample as the pressure goes down. No one has ever presented evidence that something strange happens at extremely low pressure to any known substance, that cannot be predicted by known laws of physics. All currently known laws suggest a predicted behaviour. Therefore, unless someone proves otherwise(by actually conducting a relevant experiment), it is a safe bet that the tendency will go all the way down to perfect vacuum.

I now partially agree with other guys saying you are a kind of our local jester. A kind of, as real life jesters usually were able to provide cleverly formulated insight into important manners, or ridiculed stupid ideas of their masters in a simple and funny way for them to realize that they sounded like morons. You, on the other hand, usually provide nothing but gibberish and mad babbling.

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sceptimatic

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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #177 on: July 11, 2014, 03:33:51 AM »
Sooo... You completely disagree with whatever both RE and FErs say about what we call the north pole, and "debunk" some of the most basic laws of physic, just like that? With nothing more than ideas? They are not theories. They are not even justified hypotheses. Good luck with that. I am really amazed how you can survive in the current world, as you see massive conspiracies and steaming piles of bullsh*t everywhere aside from things "you have tested". Is that "true vacuum" something you personally have experienced? Maybe read about somewhere? No?... What a shame. You have absolutely no base to claim it exists and behaves in a way you know. These are your ideas on how to explain stuff. Stuff that does not actually happen anywhere, mind you.

My take on things is that if some theory can be partially backed by evidence, and there is no evidence to the contrary of it, then it quite possibly may be true.
Example: a sample of solid cools down slower the lower the pressure of gas surrounding it is. It seems that no phase change will happen for the sample as the pressure goes down. No one has ever presented evidence that something strange happens at extremely low pressure to any known substance, that cannot be predicted by known laws of physics. All currently known laws suggest a predicted behaviour. Therefore, unless someone proves otherwise(by actually conducting a relevant experiment), it is a safe bet that the tendency will go all the way down to perfect vacuum.

I now partially agree with other guys saying you are a kind of our local jester. A kind of, as real life jesters usually were able to provide cleverly formulated insight into important manners, or ridiculed stupid ideas of their masters in a simple and funny way for them to realize that they sounded like morons. You, on the other hand, usually provide nothing but gibberish and mad babbling.
I don't care whether you kind of agree that I'm a jester, a nerd, a nutter, a psychopath, a sociopath, a tin foil hat wearing loner or any other thoughts. You are here for no other purpose than to attempt ridicule like the rest of the indoctrinated. It only works if you think it works. I'm sat laughing at you whilst you attempt this.
When you feel like understanding, come back to me.

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Macpie

  • 245
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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #178 on: July 11, 2014, 03:46:39 AM »
Well, if there is no way of even getting you to think about what you do by sticking to the subject(like the first paragraph of my last post - how comes you think the "super vacuum" even exists, if you have never encountered it in any way, or even read something clearly defining its properties with some evidence?), what can a man do but laugh at how stubborn you are? I give you examples how your ideas are widely inconsistent with themselves, hoping you would go something like "Hmm... It indeed seems like it is either this or that... But which one?". You scream back how indoctrinated I am. Whatever, even if the Earth was flat, some of your claims contradict each other. It is like saying that some place does not exist, followed by saying that you are already right there.

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sceptimatic

  • Flat Earth Scientist
  • 30076
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Re: A glass dome in the sky? Really?
« Reply #179 on: July 11, 2014, 03:56:44 AM »
Well, if there is no way of even getting you to think about what you do by sticking to the subject(like the first paragraph of my last post - how comes you think the "super vacuum" even exists, if you have never encountered it in any way, or even read something clearly defining its properties with some evidence?), what can a man do but laugh at how stubborn you are? I give you examples how your ideas are widely inconsistent with themselves, hoping you would go something like "Hmm... It indeed seems like it is either this or that... But which one?". You scream back how indoctrinated I am. Whatever, even if the Earth was flat, some of your claims contradict each other. It is like saying that some place does not exist, followed by saying that you are already right there.
Ok, I'll make a deal with you. I'll admit that I can't produce evidence for most of what I say and any evidence I did produce like the one I produced on the ice lake to prove a flat Earth will be classed as no evidence, So here's the deal.

Since I can't directly prove my stuff and can only hypothesise, how about you directly proving that you are right and I am wrong.
Let's start with gravity. All I want you to do is to tell me what gravity is and how the force is provable.
I don't want to hear stuff like, "well things fall." You know, stuff like that. I want direct proof.
So tell me what gravity IS, first of all.
Once you do this, you can then tell me about warped space time and how it's proved. Higgs boson - Dark matter - Black holes- fabric of space - big bang - special relativity - general relativity and E=MC2.

It's only fair I ask for proof of these as it's the only way I can evaluate my own thoughts and see if they are wrong.

Over to you. One thing at a time, so start with. What is gravity?