The dome is required for Den pressure to exist. How is that "overwhelming an opponent with as many arguments as possible, without regard for accuracy or strength of the arguments." (Yeah, I had to look up gish galloping)
Because it's focusing on a different aspect. Yes, denpressure needs a dome, but if you leap to the intricacies of that before you understand how the rest of it works than you're just making it certain you're going to go back to the first topic when you remember less of it and ask the same questions all over.
Not magically. You’re sounding more like a real flat earther all the time. The balloon inflates because of the difference in pressure between outside and inside. Inside, this pressure difference is not present, so an object inside will not experience this force.
What you are saying fundamentally does not make sense. The outside of a balloon cannot inflate if the inside is not also inflating, and you can't have it growing in size (ie: moving outwards, or accelerating as they were once stationary) without a force. You just
can't. We aren't talking about static moments here, we are talking about what happens during the process of inflation and, yes, it's because of a difference in pressure (which easily translates to denpressure) but
there is still a force. The time it takes doesn't matter, though obviously the force is greater if you do it faster. Puncture a balloon filled to bursting point and it's much more violent than one that's barely started expanding.
Though it's worth pointing out a balloon isn't where this started. A balloon only got brought up because of a denial of an even more basic principle, the actual chamber in question was a metal disc with rubber stretched over the top. In a regular balloon, thanks to the shape of it, things'd only get pinned to the point opposite the inflation. That chamber has a whole surface for things to push against.
I didn’t say you believed in Den Pressure, but you have been arguing that it should work on its own terms as a possible gravity replacement.
No. I'm saying you shouldn't argue against the aspects of it that do make sense just because a FEer said them. When you mix in good arguments with bad, you ruin your own credibility for those that disagree with you, and misinform those that do agree on underlying physics.
Why do you think balloons expand when you inflate them? It's not because the force is balanced in all directions, because it could be going in any direction, it's because there is excessive force against the edges. If you are against that edge, you will be pinned to that edge. You're 'pressed in one direction' because the force isn't at equilibrium, you have to be pressed somewhere, and that's obvious going to be an edge. If you start off against the metal surface, are you seriously going to tell me the force wouldn't pin you to it?
No, this is completely wrong.
As the 'Circus Big Top in Space' fills with gas it will diffuse and air pressure will be equal (give or take) throughout. Nothing will pin you anywhere.
A scientifically educated person like yourself coming out with this stuff just makes me think laughing behind your hand at us as we even bother to engage with such obvious nonsense.
Do you see my problem? You have to actively ignore what I say in order to defend your position. Yes, it will diffuse, the air pressure will be equal throughout, but
we aren't at that stage yet. I explicitly pointed that out. I'm not laughing, I'm banging my head on the wall.
If you are inside a chamber while it is being inflated, you aren't going to remain perfectly stationary with air in balance all around you. If you seriously think that I don't know what I could possibly say to explain anything to you.
I think the only reason Jane defends these theories is because she researched and wrote topics on them. If the theory is completely obliterated and defeat is accepted, all the work she has done would have been a colossal waste of time.
You are fundamentally misunderstanding the purpose of the compendium. I wrote it because a) it's fun, b) it should help people make informed arguments to refute theories rather than repeating tired old nonsense that *gasp* the FEers responsible for said theories thought of years and years ago and made sure they could answer. Being purposefully dense does not help anyone except your ego.
You can only 'obliterate' a theory if you know the slightest thing about it. Actively refusing to get informed just makes you look like an idiot.