Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?

  • 89 Replies
  • 19360 Views
*

rabinoz

  • 26528
  • +0/-0
  • Real Earth Believer
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #60 on: November 27, 2017, 03:05:34 PM »
An object in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted on by an outside force; an object at rest tends to stay at rests unless acted on by an outside force.
Therefore conservation of momentum does not exist and can be scrubbed from the words list as being a nonsense.
Incorrect! If no force is acting on an object, why would it slow down?
On earth, there is always "friction" (due contact with another object or air resistance), but "friction" is still a force so it does not nullify the principle.

Friction and air resistance can be included in the calculations and/or reduced to negligible proportions, as in the feather and ball in a low pressure chamber.

Quote from: sceptimatic
No object will ever stay in motion or gain motion unless it is acted upon by a force.
An object at rest is impossible and will never stay at rest.
Your ideas seem to be close to Aristotelian physics, which Galileo (plus earlier Indian scientists) and Newton disproved by experiment.

Yes, there seem to be earlier Indian scientists that expressed the ideas of Newton's Laws of Motion, but Newton put them down in a clear concise form - and claimed the credit!
You might gather that in a lot of ways Isaac Newton was "not a nice man",
but he was brilliant in what he achieved, with the help of many others.

Quote from: sceptimatic
However, this will work in the fictional space vacuum where there is absolutely nothing, we are told.
Your calling space fictional means nothing at all. In any case, it all works to as close as we can observe in very low pressure chambers.

Quote from: sceptimatic
So we get back to it being nonsense.
I'll change that to inertia seeing as I saw markjo's post.
Anyway that's inertia wiped out.
OK, you wipe inertia from your mind and stick to your delusion.

*

rabinoz

  • 26528
  • +0/-0
  • Real Earth Believer
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #61 on: November 27, 2017, 03:15:59 PM »
Let me see if I have this right in what you're trying to say.

Are you saying that conservation of momentum in it's real terms is momentum forever in a closed system?
Or am I not quite getting it?
Yes, though the difficult thing to achieve is the "closed system".

In real life that is always a bit of an approximation. The "Law" is correct, but the application is often subject to small errors due to friction, air resistance or some effect of gravity (whatever its cause).

But in a very low-pressure chamber, air resistance can be reduced to virtually zero and friction can be reduced to a very low level.

The "closed system" can be as big or as small as we chose. In simple cases we might just look at two objects to see "what would happen if . . . ".

*

suseuser

  • 244
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #62 on: November 27, 2017, 04:12:59 PM »
It’s true you can launch a rocket without any scientific background. I’m sure all of us have launched an Estes rocket at on time in our life. That didn’t take any background in rocket sciences.
But, when you are talking about designing a rocket from scratch. That’s a whole ‘nother ballgame! I’d sure like to see the design in detail. I’m guessing there is no detail in the design!  I had to be a publicity stunt.

*

markjo

  • Content Nazi
  • 45159
  • +98/-136
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #63 on: November 27, 2017, 04:40:05 PM »
An object in motion tends to stay in motion unless acted on by an outside force; an object at rest tends to stay at rests unless acted on by an outside force.
Therefore conservation of momentum does not exist and can be scrubbed from the words list as being a nonsense.
Incorrect! If no force is acting on an object, why would it slow down?
You'll have to excuse scepti.  He just can't wrap his brain around the concept of an idealized, friction free environment, even as just a thought experiment.
« Last Edit: November 27, 2017, 04:43:17 PM by markjo »
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.

Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #64 on: November 28, 2017, 08:55:33 AM »
An object at rest is impossible and will never stay at rest.
Don't be obtuse.  My car in the parking lot is functionally at rest.  It's not going to move unless it is acted on by an outside force.  Once it gets moving, friction is required to bring it back to rest.  Unless you have another explanation...

Quote
However, this will work in the fictional space vacuum where there is absolutely nothing, we are told.

So we get back to it being nonsense.
And this is why I shouldn't have bothered engaging with you again.  You believe that it is okay to use some baseless claim to support an argument, despite all of the actual physical evidence contradicting your claim.  Space is a near vacuum.  Some lunatic calling it nonsense doesn't actually alter the physical reality.

Quote
Anyway that's inertia wiped out.
Only in the privacy of your own mind, and built on a foundation of a deep misunderstanding of the world around you.

*

MicroBeta

  • 2490
  • +1/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #65 on: November 28, 2017, 01:20:57 PM »
It’s true you can launch a rocket without any scientific background. I’m sure all of us have launched an Estes rocket at on time in our life. That didn’t take any background in rocket sciences.
But, when you are talking about designing a rocket from scratch. That’s a whole ‘nother ballgame! I’d sure like to see the design in detail. I’m guessing there is no detail in the design!  I had to be a publicity stunt.
Agreed.  I'd love to see the design specs and drawings. 
Since it costs 2.72¢ to produce a penny, putting in your 2¢ if really worth 5.44¢.

*

Nightsky

  • 900
  • +0/-0
  • Know the implications of what you believe.
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #66 on: November 28, 2017, 02:22:42 PM »
So tell me what laws I'm ignoring that cater for the design and build of the stuff you mention.

Tell me how it all works so you can tell me what I'm going against.

What is it that I'm going against?
Try the Law of Conservation of Momentum?
What does conservation of momentum actually mean?
Nice and basic.
Have you ever seen or played with a Newton's Cradle, classic example of conservation of momentum.
Ok fair enough.

The conservation bit is a bit puzzling.
What exactly is the meaning behind it?
It simply means energy is being transferred from one moving body to another. It's not rocket science, that's another bucket of badgers.
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

*

Lemmiwinks

  • 2161
  • +0/-0
  • President of the Non-Conformist Zetetic Council
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #67 on: December 01, 2017, 01:30:11 PM »
Did you miss the part where that guy is a Flat Earther?  Maybe he'll finally get some decent pictures of the disc and prove that the earth is flat once and for all.

You don't understand. Since he is a flat earther, he might confirm that the earth is a globe to all the flatties out there.
But then he won't be a flat earther, so flat earthers won't believe him because all non-flat earthers are part of the conspiracy against flat earthers.
So Logkical!
It's nothing to do with non-flat Earthers being in on any conspiracy against flat Earthers.
It's more a case of a mass following of a set of so called sciences that are no more than religious beliefs.
Basically a mass following of something that has no genuine verifiable proof but is argued to have it based on some kind of peer reviewing by whoever is stood out as the so called experts on what is pushed out as a truth  based on nothing more that brainwashing in order to get people to be trained into acceptance of artefacts as the reality of a historical so called truth, etc.

You just... kinda broke me. I have been typing and deleting this message for a few minutes at this point, because I do not know exactly how to handle your absurdity of a message. You have made the point that nothing can be trusted, including the experts of their fields, the scientific method in general, and the acceptances of masses. You have called the scientific process religious, as if it were something based in faith, not a process that depletes the need for faith-based thinking. You have implied that flat earth "science" is to be trusted, but have not explained the scientific processes that verify the earth is flat and that neither use peer-review nor experts.

It seems that you have a lot of skepticism for the intentions of the Big Brothers (NASA, Government in general, experts, etc.) of your world. I understand the scrutiny you must put these groups through in order to gain their trust, and often times you find stories that verify that they are, in fact, corrupt in many ways. Experts in the pharmaceutical industries create studies to boost sales, governments falsify votes, and NASA landed on the moon in 1969 ;)... but, if you start to deny everything that every expert says because some have lied for personal gain, then you must deny all that you take in because it is equally as fallible, including the flat earth theories discussed on this site by "experts".

How do you pick and choose what experts to follow? Are you pragmatically agnostic in life altogether and just don't truly believe in anything, or do you just denounce science because it has a funny way of providing uncomfortable truths (we are primates, we are animals, the world was not made for humans, but that humans evolved to be, the world is round, there has not been any proof of a heaven or other afterlife stories, the universe is expansive relative to us, gravity is real and a bitch, I could probably go on, but you get the point... ... ... right...)?
It's very very simple for me.

This is how I work, so try and absorb it to understand the simple logical (my logic) way that I go about it.

To believe something outright where I do not require to question it, I must be able to verify it in a physical way so as to be comfortable with it as the most potential truth.

The stuff I'm arguing against and the stuff I'm arguing for have very little in terms of physical proof, so I have to revert to using my logical mind to see what has a potential better fit at this present time.

This is where I'm at now.
I'm not arguing my side and telling everyone it's all physically true. I'm telling them that my side is a much better fit than their side when looked at logically.
Naturally other people will tell me the very same thing from their side.

I'll always argue mine as if it's a truth against anyone who argues their side as if their side is a truth. It's a tit for tat measure and a way for me to tell anyone that I'm backing my logical side.

The entire truth of most things could be a hell of a lot different than what we all think.

The arguments against alternate theorists to the mainstream given, is arguments based on best guess scenarios and basically lies and misinformation with a hint of potential truth, depending on who's telling them.


All I can do is question them and decide what's worth accepting and what is worth arguing against.
And here I am.

So have you finally done the experiment that I recommended a couple years back that only requires you have a friend a few hundred miles away and a phone to prove the earth is round? I mean, since you only believe what you can prove.
I have 13 [academic qualifications] actually. I'll leave it up to you to guess which, or simply call me a  liar. Either is fine.

Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur

*

RocketSauce

  • 1441
  • +0/-0
  • I kill penguins for fun
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #68 on: December 01, 2017, 01:33:53 PM »
It’s true you can launch a rocket without any scientific background. I’m sure all of us have launched an Estes rocket at on time in our life. That didn’t take any background in rocket sciences.
But, when you are talking about designing a rocket from scratch. That’s a whole ‘nother ballgame! I’d sure like to see the design in detail. I’m guessing there is no detail in the design!  I had to be a publicity stunt.

What about "Water Rockets"

or Mentos and Diet Coke Rockets....
Quote from: Every FE'r

Please don't mention Himawari 8
Quote from: sceptimatic
Impossible to have the same volume and different density.

*fact*
Extra Virgin Penguin Blood is a natural aphrodisiac

*

TheMelkur

  • 46
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #69 on: December 01, 2017, 01:47:45 PM »
So have you finally done the experiment that I recommended a couple years back that only requires you have a friend a few hundred miles away and a phone to prove the earth is round? I mean, since you only believe what you can prove.
Have you ever done that? I notice round eathers are quick to ask for experiments, and slow to do them themselves.

*

rabinoz

  • 26528
  • +0/-0
  • Real Earth Believer
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #70 on: December 01, 2017, 04:05:02 PM »
So have you finally done the experiment that I recommended a couple years back that only requires you have a friend a few hundred miles away and a phone to prove the earth is round? I mean, since you only believe what you can prove.
Have you ever done that? I notice round eathers are quick to ask for experiments, and slow to do them themselves.
I don't need to do specific experiments to at least show that no current flat earth model is anywhere correct.

So you come along with a flat earth that explains what I see with my own eyes and try again.
Those ancient Greeks had little more than their eyes and that seems to be where the Globe started.

?

Alpha2Omega

  • 4107
  • +1/-1
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #71 on: December 01, 2017, 05:16:43 PM »
So have you finally done the experiment that I recommended a couple years back that only requires you have a friend a few hundred miles away and a phone to prove the earth is round? I mean, since you only believe what you can prove.
Have you ever done that? I notice round eathers are quick to ask for experiments, and slow to do them themselves.

I've done plenty of experiments that, as a side effect, demonstrate beyond doubt that the earth is a rotating sphere. None were precise enough to tell if it's an ellipsoid (or reasonable facsimile thereof) instead of a perfect sphere (since the difference is subtle) but have no reason to doubt that it is.

So, what experiments have you done? What did they show?
"Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

*

sceptimatic

  • Flat Earth Scientist
  • 30076
  • +3/-4
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #72 on: December 02, 2017, 12:49:16 AM »
Let me see if I have this right in what you're trying to say.

Are you saying that conservation of momentum in it's real terms is momentum forever in a closed system?
Or am I not quite getting it?
Yes, though the difficult thing to achieve is the "closed system".

In real life that is always a bit of an approximation. The "Law" is correct, but the application is often subject to small errors due to friction, air resistance or some effect of gravity (whatever its cause).

But in a very low-pressure chamber, air resistance can be reduced to virtually zero and friction can be reduced to a very low level.

The "closed system" can be as big or as small as we chose. In simple cases we might just look at two objects to see "what would happen if . . . ".
Picture this if you can.

Deep space with nothing as we are told.
A so called solid ball has been moved somehow in it, very slowly.
So here's the way it appears to me.

The ball was somehow pushed which is now moving forever unless it hits something  but for this thought we will stick to the space we're told.

Now here's the key and I'd like an explanation.

If that ball is moving in space it has to be moving in a direction at a constant velocity forever because as I am told, this is conservation of the momentum that was apparently applied to the ball to get it underway.

In space as we are told there is no up nor down nor direction for anything in it so how can any object move in it?
No gravity, no matter and no direction and yet we can have something not only be moved in it but carry on moving within it.
How?


Because if there's no real rational answer, there's no real meaning of conservation of momentum and also no inertia.



*

sceptimatic

  • Flat Earth Scientist
  • 30076
  • +3/-4
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #73 on: December 02, 2017, 12:52:36 AM »

You'll have to excuse scepti.  He just can't wrap his brain around the concept of an idealized, friction free environment, even as just a thought experiment.
There's a very good reason for that. A frictionless environment cannot exist as an environment so why use it?
The only way to use it is for sci-fi and if that's what you want to use it for then state it and we can try and debate on the sci-fi by simply making up stuff.

Oh wait, mainstream science is already doing this.

*

Copper Knickers

  • 904
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #74 on: December 02, 2017, 01:25:36 AM »
In space as we are told there is no up nor down nor direction for anything in it so how can any object move in it?
No gravity, no matter and no direction and yet we can have something not only be moved in it but carry on moving within it.
How?

Why would the object not be able to move? Things move, once set moving, in space as well as on earth. There's no difference except that on earth there's typically a bunch of forces which will in time stop the object moving.

*

rabinoz

  • 26528
  • +0/-0
  • Real Earth Believer
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #75 on: December 02, 2017, 02:24:45 AM »
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Picture this if you can.

Deep space with nothing as we are told.
A so called solid ball has been moved somehow in it, very slowly.
So here's the way it appears to me.

The ball was somehow pushed which is now moving forever unless it hits something  but for this thought we will stick to the space we're told.

Now here's the key and I'd like an explanation.

If that ball is moving in space it has to be moving in a direction at a constant velocity forever because as I am told, this is conservation of the momentum that was apparently applied to the ball to get it underway.
Yes, if there really were no others forces involved.
Anywhere in the solar system, however, there is gravitation from the sun, planets and any other nearby objects.

The sun is so massive that, unless your ball is close to a planet it would be mainly affected by the gravitation of tne sun and would end up in an orbit around the sun, though probably a very elliptic one.
Your ball would then continue in this orbit, except in the very unlikely event of it striking some object.

Quote from: sceptimatic
In space as we are told there is no up nor down nor direction for anything in it so how can any object move in it?
No gravity, no matter and no direction and yet we can have something not only be moved in it but carry on moving within it.
How?
Down is just a term indicating the direction things will fall or hang and up is the opposite direction.
But, that does not mean that there are no directions in space, just that we need a different way to measure it.
In space navigation direction can be determined by star sights, as was done on the Apollo missions.

There may be little or no gravitation and no matter but there are still directions and your ball could still travel.

Quote from: sceptimatic
Because if there's no real rational answer, there's no real meaning of conservation of momentum and also no inertia.
Of course there are rational answers!

The reason that idealised "laws" are useful is that it let's us determine what will happen in any given situation.
The deviations from the ideal situation  (friction, air resistance etc) can then be allowed for.
Then when it comes to the motion of satellites in High Earth Orbit, "air" resistance is so low that it can usually be ignored.

You might call all this illogical. There's nothing I can do about that. I'm just doing my poor best to say it how it is.

*

MicroBeta

  • 2490
  • +1/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #76 on: December 02, 2017, 05:18:19 AM »
So have you finally done the experiment that I recommended a couple years back that only requires you have a friend a few hundred miles away and a phone to prove the earth is round? I mean, since you only believe what you can prove.
Have you ever done that? I notice round eathers are quick to ask for experiments, and slow to do them themselves.
How do you know we haven't done any experiments?

Mike
Since it costs 2.72¢ to produce a penny, putting in your 2¢ if really worth 5.44¢.

*

MicroBeta

  • 2490
  • +1/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #77 on: December 02, 2017, 08:06:52 AM »

You'll have to excuse scepti.  He just can't wrap his brain around the concept of an idealized, friction free environment, even as just a thought experiment.
There's a very good reason for that. A frictionless environment cannot exist as an environment so why use it?
The only way to use it is for sci-fi and if that's what you want to use it for then state it and we can try and debate on the sci-fi by simply making up stuff.

Oh wait, mainstream science is already doing this.
It's usually done this way because it's unnecessary to illustrate a concept.

Friction usually has a negligible effect on the magnitude of the result and thus isn't relevant to the concept at hand.  As long as it's understood that it exists it isn't needed to understand the concept being discussed.

Mike
Since it costs 2.72¢ to produce a penny, putting in your 2¢ if really worth 5.44¢.

*

Nightsky

  • 900
  • +0/-0
  • Know the implications of what you believe.
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #78 on: December 02, 2017, 10:19:39 AM »

You'll have to excuse scepti.  He just can't wrap his brain around the concept of an idealized, friction free environment, even as just a thought experiment.
There's a very good reason for that. A frictionless environment cannot exist as an environment so why use it?
The only way to use it is for sci-fi and if that's what you want to use it for then state it and we can try and debate on the sci-fi by simply making up stuff.

Oh wait, mainstream science is already doing this.
What about maglev trains, or substances that become frictionless at supercooled temperatures?
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

*

markjo

  • Content Nazi
  • 45159
  • +98/-136
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #79 on: December 02, 2017, 10:34:14 AM »

You'll have to excuse scepti.  He just can't wrap his brain around the concept of an idealized, friction free environment, even as just a thought experiment.
There's a very good reason for that. A frictionless environment cannot exist as an environment so why use it?
Mostly because it makes it a lot easier to focus on the concept at hand if you don't have to worry about things like friction, wind, energy being radiated off into space, etc.  Those other "real world" conditions can be added to the mix after you start to understand the basic concept.
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.

*

suseuser

  • 244
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #80 on: December 03, 2017, 12:59:56 PM »
Sceptimatic seems to be outnumbered about 100 to 1 on this site. That has got to suck. This site seems to be designed just to beat up on FE believers. Imagine if you went to a Round Earth Society page and about 95% were FE believers?  Although I can’t agree with his position I can at least admire his tenacity!  I think it is possible to feel empathy towards someone who is constantly demeaned as a human being. Will I ever be a FE believer? No.  Will Sceptimatic ever be a RE believer? I’m fairly certain the answer is no. My post has zero significance to the OP’s question. I’m just trying to be the voice of reason. It has got to be a depressing existence to feel like everyone in the world is conspiring against you. This type of paranoia has got to be exhausting.

*

Nightsky

  • 900
  • +0/-0
  • Know the implications of what you believe.
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #81 on: December 03, 2017, 01:44:26 PM »
Sceptimatic seems to be outnumbered about 100 to 1 on this site. That has got to suck. This site seems to be designed just to beat up on FE believers. Imagine if you went to a Round Earth Society page and about 95% were FE believers?  Although I can’t agree with his position I can at least admire his tenacity!  I think it is possible to feel empathy towards someone who is constantly demeaned as a human being. Will I ever be a FE believer? No.  Will Sceptimatic ever be a RE believer? I’m fairly certain the answer is no. My post has zero significance to the OP’s question. I’m just trying to be the voice of reason. It has got to be a depressing existence to feel like everyone in the world is conspiring against you. This type of paranoia has got to be exhausting.
What about those gullible types who swing by and read what Mr. S has to say? You’ve obviously heard of fake news, well Mr S is one source. What he puts out is so far off beam, coupled with his method that is so disingenuous, claiming to be free free thinking while all along being a narrow minded bigot. Scepticism has been at the forefront of science since the beginning. Science is not about trying to prove  your ideas are right, it’s more about interrogating them trying to find the flaws and weak spots. Sceptimatic or sponge pants, is not free thinking, rather he’s steeped in conformation bias and not willing to put his claims up for scrutiny. The man is a fraud end off. I’ve asked him countless times if he has seen his magical molecules....and he has never answered the question. There is no conspiracy involved. The man makes outlandish claims and is incapable of any kind of self reflection.
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

*

suseuser

  • 244
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #82 on: December 03, 2017, 02:37:18 PM »
I can’t argue with any of your observations Nightsky. Reality and logical thought process has never been a prerequisite for mans existence. But, I get the feeling his FE comrades sort of throw him to the wolves. I think we have to have to ask the same question to FE and RE folks the same question. What would convince you the the Earth is Flat or round?  If either camp says nothing would convince me. Than the discussion is done. There is no point in continuing the conversation.

*

Space Cowgirl

  • MOM
  • Planar Moderator
  • 52409
  • +101/-95
  • Official FE Recruiter
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #83 on: December 03, 2017, 03:33:30 PM »
Sceptimatic seems to be outnumbered about 100 to 1 on this site. That has got to suck. This site seems to be designed just to beat up on FE believers. Imagine if you went to a Round Earth Society page and about 95% were FE believers?  Although I can’t agree with his position I can at least admire his tenacity!  I think it is possible to feel empathy towards someone who is constantly demeaned as a human being. Will I ever be a FE believer? No.  Will Sceptimatic ever be a RE believer? I’m fairly certain the answer is no. My post has zero significance to the OP’s question. I’m just trying to be the voice of reason. It has got to be a depressing existence to feel like everyone in the world is conspiring against you. This type of paranoia has got to be exhausting.

scepti is an FE warrior.
I'm sorry. Am I to understand that when you have a boner you like to imagine punching the shit out of Tom Bishop? That's disgusting.

*

rabinoz

  • 26528
  • +0/-0
  • Real Earth Believer
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #84 on: December 03, 2017, 04:33:08 PM »
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Sceptimatic or sponge pants, is not free thinking, rather he’s steeped in confirmation bias and not willing to put his claims up for scrutiny. The man is a fraud end off. I’ve asked him countless times if he has seen his magical molecules....and he has never answered the question. There is no conspiracy involved. The man makes outlandish claims and is incapable of any kind of self reflection.
Sure, I agree with all you say about Sceppy and his denpressure.
If, however, if you look into the beliefs of many flat earthers you will find that they consider UA as ridiculous (as do I) but they cannot accept Newtonian Gravitation because that would literally pull their flat earth apart.

So there are quite a number here and many FE YouTubers who simply claim that some things fall and some don't because of density and buoyancy.

What Sceppy has tried to do is make a logical framework that covers these claims.
His failing is that he has tried to do this purely from his own "thought experiments" without any referenice to real life.

So, I sympathise with him, but still think that his ideas are totally divorced from reality.
And then we have
scepti is an FE warrior.
Looks like we have a Don Quixote aiming at his private windmills.

Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #85 on: December 11, 2017, 12:40:16 AM »
As I understand it, Mike Hughes is not necessarily a Flat Earther at the moment, but he will very likely become a true flat Earther after his next launch.

*

rabinoz

  • 26528
  • +0/-0
  • Real Earth Believer
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #86 on: December 11, 2017, 03:11:13 AM »
As I understand it, Mike Hughes is not necessarily a Flat Earther at the moment, but he will very likely become a true flat Earther after his next launch.
A bit like the key of the concerto that resulted when the piano fell down the coal mine.

"A flat minor."

Does this place feel like you're still "down the rabbit hole"?

Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #87 on: March 25, 2018, 08:20:36 AM »
As I understand it, Mike Hughes is not necessarily a Flat Earther at the moment, but he will very likely become a true flat Earther after his next launch.

Color me surprised. Congratulations to Mr. Hughes for only the slightest of injuries after Saturday's launch.

I was fully expecting a more gruesome outcome.

?

smokified

  • 386
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #88 on: March 25, 2018, 08:26:24 AM »
I was thinking once about a "Flat Earth Live from Space 24/7" Live feed, from when some flat earthers launch a rocket up to orbit and make their own feed.
Such would be expensive but a cool project.

What is this rocket going to "orbit" if the earth is flat?

?

SpaceCadet

  • 466
  • +0/-0
Re: Is a Flat Earth Rocket Scientist an oxymoron?
« Reply #89 on: March 25, 2018, 10:15:45 AM »
I was thinking once about a "Flat Earth Live from Space 24/7" Live feed, from when some flat earthers launch a rocket up to orbit and make their own feed.
Such would be expensive but a cool project.

What is this rocket going to "orbit" if the earth is flat?
Celestial gears?