Denspressure vs Reality

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #660 on: November 27, 2017, 02:43:56 AM »
I've heard it said that everyone is an expert in something. Scepti, out of curiosity, what is it that you consider yourself to be most skilled in?

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rabinoz

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #661 on: November 27, 2017, 02:46:04 AM »
Acceleration can never be a constant, ever.

Acceleration is a gain in speed/mph. It is never a constant until it becomes a set speed/mph, in which it then ceases to be called, acceleration.
Incorrect!

In the real world is acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so it would be measured as
so many (metres per second change) each second.
It is usually written as m/s2 or as ms-2, though the units could be different.

So there is no reason why acceleration should not be constant, at least for a limited time.

For example, 100 kph is about 28 m/s
so if a car accelerates with a constant acceleration rate of 2.8 m/s2,
it would take about 10 sec to reach 100 kph.
How would you tackle a similar problem?

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #662 on: November 27, 2017, 02:47:12 AM »
Also, why would we not use common, scientific vocabulary?

“Cows are carnivores.”

“No, they eat grass.”

“Well, in my model, cows have claws and sharp teeth.”

“That’s a cat.”

“In your model, but the way I’m using the word ‘cow,’ I mean that small animal with sharp teeth and claws. And they ARE carnivores. My pet cow loves to sit on my lap, purr, and eat spinach.”

“You mean ‘tuna’?”

“Not in my model.”
That's actually what your science is in terms of this stuff.
Your scientists are telling people that certain fictions are truths.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #663 on: November 27, 2017, 02:50:12 AM »
I've heard it said that everyone is an expert in something. Scepti, out of curiosity, what is it that you consider yourself to be most skilled in?
I'm most skilled in being myself.

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #664 on: November 27, 2017, 02:52:03 AM »
I've heard it said that everyone is an expert in something. Scepti, out of curiosity, what is it that you consider yourself to be most skilled in?
I'm most skilled in being myself.

So... deflecting.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #665 on: November 27, 2017, 02:55:17 AM »
Acceleration can never be a constant, ever.

Acceleration is a gain in speed/mph. It is never a constant until it becomes a set speed/mph, in which it then ceases to be called, acceleration.
Incorrect!

In the real world is acceleration is the rate of change of velocity, so it would be measured as
so many (metres per second change) each second.
It is usually written as m/s2 or as ms-2, though the units could be different.

So there is no reason why acceleration should not be constant, at least for a limited time.

For example, 100 kph is about 28 m/s
so if a car accelerates with a constant acceleration rate of 2.8 m/s2,
it would take about 10 sec to reach 100 kph.
How would you tackle a similar problem?
I would tackle the problem in a simple way.
First I would understand that the car that is accelerating is not at any time doing it as a constant.
I would realise this by noting a change in mph or m/s or km/h or whatever.

I'd then understand that working any numbers out of any size would never ever make any acceleration a constant.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #666 on: November 27, 2017, 02:55:49 AM »
I've heard it said that everyone is an expert in something. Scepti, out of curiosity, what is it that you consider yourself to be most skilled in?
I'm most skilled in being myself.

So... deflecting.
You asked me a question and I gave you an answer. How am I deflecting?

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #667 on: November 27, 2017, 02:58:22 AM »
I've heard it said that everyone is an expert in something. Scepti, out of curiosity, what is it that you consider yourself to be most skilled in?
I'm most skilled in being myself.

So... deflecting.
You asked me a question and I gave you an answer. How am I deflecting?

By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?

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rabinoz

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #668 on: November 27, 2017, 03:02:36 AM »
Also, why would we not use common, scientific vocabulary?

“Cows are carnivores.”

“No, they eat grass.”

“Well, in my model, cows have claws and sharp teeth.”

“That’s a cat.”

“In your model, but the way I’m using the word ‘cow,’ I mean that small animal with sharp teeth and claws. And they ARE carnivores. My pet cow loves to sit on my lap, purr, and eat spinach.”

“You mean ‘tuna’?”

“Not in my model.”
That's actually what your science is in terms of this stuff.
Your scientists are telling people that certain fictions are truths.
Really? Funny how the fictions that "scientists are telling people" actuality works and your fantasy doesn't!

Explain how your fantasy predicts the lift of a new aircraft before it has ever flown.
And how your fantasy would calculate the take off and landing distance's for said plane.
Then explain how your fantasy would calculate the size girder needed in the design of a bridge span of known length and loading.

Real people in the real world have to design things like this and much more complex things.

And, yes, they need those terrible things called equations, so run off and dream up some more total nonsense.
 

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Crutchwater

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #669 on: November 27, 2017, 03:18:20 AM »
This thread is ALL WIN in my book

sceptimatic, keep up the fight, my friend! You are why I'm here!
I will always be Here To Laugh At You.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #670 on: November 27, 2017, 03:20:04 AM »


By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?
Innovation.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #671 on: November 27, 2017, 03:22:00 AM »
Also, why would we not use common, scientific vocabulary?

“Cows are carnivores.”

“No, they eat grass.”

“Well, in my model, cows have claws and sharp teeth.”

“That’s a cat.”

“In your model, but the way I’m using the word ‘cow,’ I mean that small animal with sharp teeth and claws. And they ARE carnivores. My pet cow loves to sit on my lap, purr, and eat spinach.”

“You mean ‘tuna’?”

“Not in my model.”
That's actually what your science is in terms of this stuff.
Your scientists are telling people that certain fictions are truths.
Really? Funny how the fictions that "scientists are telling people" actuality works and your fantasy doesn't!

Explain how your fantasy predicts the lift of a new aircraft before it has ever flown.
And how your fantasy would calculate the take off and landing distance's for said plane.
Then explain how your fantasy would calculate the size girder needed in the design of a bridge span of known length and loading.

Real people in the real world have to design things like this and much more complex things.

And, yes, they need those terrible things called equations, so run off and dream up some more total nonsense.
 
I have no issues with any of this stuff.

What am I going against that would stop any of what you say working?

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #672 on: November 27, 2017, 03:23:14 AM »
This thread is ALL WIN in my book

sceptimatic, keep up the fight, my friend! You are why I'm here!
I intend to.

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #673 on: November 27, 2017, 03:33:04 AM »


By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?
Innovation.

That seems unlikely to me.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #674 on: November 27, 2017, 03:39:41 AM »


By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?
Innovation.

That seems unlikely to me.
Pointless actually asking wasn't it.
Next time just think of me in however way you feel best suits your mood. I'm happy with what you decide.

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #675 on: November 27, 2017, 03:45:13 AM »


By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?
Innovation.

That seems unlikely to me.
Pointless actually asking wasn't it.
Next time just think of me in however way you feel best suits your mood. I'm happy with what you decide.

I'm trying to show you the fallacies in your conjectures by relating to something you are familiar with.

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rabinoz

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #676 on: November 27, 2017, 03:46:34 AM »
I would tackle the problem in a simple way.
First I would understand that the car that is accelerating is not at any time doing it as a constant.
I would realise this by noting a change in mph or m/s or km/h or whatever.

I'd then understand that working any numbers out of any size would never ever make any acceleration a constant.
Nothing in what you have said means that acceleration cannot be constant.
If you, or some automatic means, were to carefully adjust the accelerator
so that the speed increased by 10 kph each second for 10 seconds the acceleration would be constant for those 10 seconds.

Where is the problem it that?

What you are claiming is that you could never work thebeforehandut before hand.
Hence you would be totally useless at designing anything in the real world where you continually have to work out
           "what would happen if . . . . . ?" type of problems.

Thanks for proving how really useless your ideas would be at handling real world problems,

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #677 on: November 27, 2017, 03:48:52 AM »


By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?
Innovation.

That seems unlikely to me.
Pointless actually asking wasn't it.
Next time just think of me in however way you feel best suits your mood. I'm happy with what you decide.

I'm trying to show you the fallacies in your conjectures by relating to something you are familiar with.
By all means keep trying.

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #678 on: November 27, 2017, 03:50:39 AM »


By intentionally ignoring the obvious intent of my question. What is or was a hobby or profession that you consider yourself skilled in?
Innovation.

That seems unlikely to me.
Pointless actually asking wasn't it.
Next time just think of me in however way you feel best suits your mood. I'm happy with what you decide.

I'm trying to show you the fallacies in your conjectures by relating to something you are familiar with.
By all means keep trying.

That requires you to tell me something you are familiar with, so that we can apply physics to it.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #679 on: November 27, 2017, 03:59:52 AM »

Nothing in what you have said means that acceleration cannot be constant.
If you, or some automatic means, were to carefully adjust the accelerator
so that the speed increased by 10 kph each second for 10 seconds the acceleration would be constant for those 10 seconds.

Where is the problem it that?

The problem is in the word, ACCELERATION, because it means the movement of the vehicle/object builds in mph or m/s or inches per second if you want.
It means that it can never be constant even if you accelerate for 1 second or 100 seconds, etc.

It doesn't matter which way you look at it in any realistic term. Acceleration will never be a constant....ever.

What you are claiming is that you could never work thebeforehandut before hand.
Hence you would be totally useless at designing anything in the real world where you continually have to work out
           "what would happen if . . . . . ?" type of problems.

Thanks for proving how really useless your ideas would be at handling real world problems,
No. I could work stuff out in hypothetical situations.

For instance if someone says, what would happen if you could stop a truck with one hand whilst wearing a pair of tight leggings showing the extremely tiny little bulge in your pants, whilst wearing a cape with your hair also slicked back.
I'd probably say that the truck would be smashed up and I'd think I was superman.
All totally hypothetical of course.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #680 on: November 27, 2017, 04:00:31 AM »


That requires you to tell me something you are familiar with, so that we can apply physics to it.
How about ACCELERATION.

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rabinoz

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #681 on: November 27, 2017, 04:02:51 AM »
No. I could work stuff out in hypothetical situations.

For instance if someone says, what would happen if you could stop a truck with one hand whilst wearing a pair of tight leggings showing the extremely tiny little bulge in your pants, whilst wearing a cape with your hair also slicked back.
I'd probably say that the truck would be smashed up and I'd think I was superman.
All totally hypothetical of course.

in other words, you and your theories are total crap, just as I thought.

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #682 on: November 27, 2017, 04:05:53 AM »


That requires you to tell me something you are familiar with, so that we can apply physics to it.
How about ACCELERATION.

I'm on a train right now going 130 kph, how many seconds will it take to stop if it looses 1 kph per second? I know it's hard, but you can figure it out if you are an expert in acceleration.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #683 on: November 27, 2017, 04:08:34 AM »
No. I could work stuff out in hypothetical situations.

For instance if someone says, what would happen if you could stop a truck with one hand whilst wearing a pair of tight leggings showing the extremely tiny little bulge in your pants, whilst wearing a cape with your hair also slicked back.
I'd probably say that the truck would be smashed up and I'd think I was superman.
All totally hypothetical of course.

in other words, you and your theories are total crap, just as I thought.
You started it.

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Nightsky

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #684 on: November 27, 2017, 04:08:39 AM »

Nothing in what you have said means that acceleration cannot be constant.
If you, or some automatic means, were to carefully adjust the accelerator
so that the speed increased by 10 kph each second for 10 seconds the acceleration would be constant for those 10 seconds.

Where is the problem it that?

The problem is in the word, ACCELERATION, because it means the movement of the vehicle/object builds in mph or m/s or inches per second if you want.
It means that it can never be constant even if you accelerate for 1 second or 100 seconds, etc.

It doesn't matter which way you look at it in any realistic term. Acceleration will never be a constant....ever.

What you are claiming is that you could never work thebeforehandut before hand.
Hence you would be totally useless at designing anything in the real world where you continually have to work out
           "what would happen if . . . . . ?" type of problems.

Thanks for proving how really useless your ideas would be at handling real world problems,
No. I could work stuff out in hypothetical situations.

For instance if someone says, what would happen if you could stop a truck with one hand whilst wearing a pair of tight leggings showing the extremely tiny little bulge in your pants, whilst wearing a cape with your hair also slicked back.
I'd probably say that the truck would be smashed up and I'd think I was superman.
All totally hypothetical of course.

Wrong.... Acceleration is a rate of change and as such can be constant.
One can accelerate a shaft from rest to N revs/ sec over time 't'
The shaft can be said to have undergone a period of uniform or constant Acceleration until it reached its max speed.
« Last Edit: November 27, 2017, 04:10:37 AM by Nightsky »
You can call me Gwyneth
I said that
Oh for the love of- Logical formulation:
FET is wrong, unsupported by evidence, and most models are refuted on multiple fronts; those that aren't tend not to make enough predictions to be realistically falsifiable
Jane said these

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #685 on: November 27, 2017, 04:11:54 AM »


That requires you to tell me something you are familiar with, so that we can apply physics to it.
How about ACCELERATION.

I'm on a train right now going 130 kph, how many seconds will it take to stop if it looses 1 kph per second? I know it's hard, but you can figure it out if you are an expert in acceleration.
It has nothing to do with acceleration.

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #686 on: November 27, 2017, 04:14:15 AM »

Nothing in what you have said means that acceleration cannot be constant.
If you, or some automatic means, were to carefully adjust the accelerator
so that the speed increased by 10 kph each second for 10 seconds the acceleration would be constant for those 10 seconds.

Where is the problem it that?

The problem is in the word, ACCELERATION, because it means the movement of the vehicle/object builds in mph or m/s or inches per second if you want.
It means that it can never be constant even if you accelerate for 1 second or 100 seconds, etc.

It doesn't matter which way you look at it in any realistic term. Acceleration will never be a constant....ever.

What you are claiming is that you could never work thebeforehandut before hand.
Hence you would be totally useless at designing anything in the real world where you continually have to work out
           "what would happen if . . . . . ?" type of problems.

Thanks for proving how really useless your ideas would be at handling real world problems,
No. I could work stuff out in hypothetical situations.

For instance if someone says, what would happen if you could stop a truck with one hand whilst wearing a pair of tight leggings showing the extremely tiny little bulge in your pants, whilst wearing a cape with your hair also slicked back.
I'd probably say that the truck would be smashed up and I'd think I was superman.
All totally hypothetical of course.

Wrong.... Acceleration is a rate of change and as such can be constant.
One can accelerate a shaft from rest to N revs/ sec over time 't'
The shaft can be said to have undergone a period of uniform or constant Acceleration until it reached its max speed.
No it can't. It's either under acceleration until it reaches its max speed and then becomes a constant speed or it becomes a constant speed before it reaches max speed if the acceleration ceases at any point before max speed....as long as it's not a shut off of power which would then becomes deceleration.

Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #687 on: November 27, 2017, 04:17:18 AM »


That requires you to tell me something you are familiar with, so that we can apply physics to it.
How about ACCELERATION.

I'm on a train right now going 130 kph, how many seconds will it take to stop if it looses 1 kph per second? I know it's hard, but you can figure it out if you are an expert in acceleration.
It has nothing to do with acceleration.

It has everything to do with acceleration, and we all see it but you.

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Jonny B Smart

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #688 on: November 27, 2017, 04:30:23 AM »
Hey folks, I need to take a break. Family and life needs me. Also, Scepti’s astonishing ignorance gives me complete confidence that the public is not in any great danger of jumping into his rabbit hole. I’ll check back later. Cheers!
"Science is real."
--They Might Be Giants

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sceptimatic

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Re: Denspressure vs Reality
« Reply #689 on: November 27, 2017, 04:33:18 AM »


That requires you to tell me something you are familiar with, so that we can apply physics to it.
How about ACCELERATION.

I'm on a train right now going 130 kph, how many seconds will it take to stop if it looses 1 kph per second? I know it's hard, but you can figure it out if you are an expert in acceleration.
It has nothing to do with acceleration.

It has everything to do with acceleration, and we all see it but you.
Nope, you're talking about a constant speed.