Yes there is but you refuse to actually grasp it.
Maybe once you provide something to actually grasp (rather than just bascially saying down is down), people will start to grasp it.
Each molecule pushes against their own resistance foundation below.
Again, WHY?
Why doesn't it push against the dome above? Or the left or the right?
Why does it magically push against DOWN?
For simplicity consider a simple cube, air tight and full of air.
Why does the air stack in any particular direction inside this box?
It all makes perfect sense and as expected.
If you took notice of my explanations over time you'd see that this just verifies what I've been saying.
It makes no sense at all in your model.
If you had actually bothered paying attention and honestly engaging with what I have explained you would realise that.
You claim that displacement of atmosphere causes weight.
The box displaces more atmosphere when it is evacuated, but it weighs less.
That directly contradicts your model.
With your model, when it displaces more atmosphere it should weigh more.
And as it would displace basically all the atmosphere it should behave in a similar manner as filling it up with the densest possible material, with the exact density depending on just how good a vacuum it gets.
If it gets down to .1 atm, that means it is displacing 90% of the air, and thus it should be the same as filling it with a substance 90% as dense as the densest possible material.
Yet inexplicable, it weighs less, in complete defiance of your model, but 100% consistent with the model of mainstream science.
They're all under pressure from each other. How can't you get this?
The bottom one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those above.
No, it wont.
That is because if they are all under pressure from each other, there is no directionality there.
You could likewise say:
The top one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those below.
The left one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those to the right.
The right one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those to the left.
The back one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those in front.
The front one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those behind.
The central one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those around.
The outside one's in the stacking system will naturally be under the most pressure due to resisting those inside.
It works equally well in any direction.
You are yet to provide a justification for the directionality
It's about what is placed within the stack and what foundation is used that creates the directionality. This is what you and others seem to continually overlook.
No, it isn't what we overlook.
Discussing what is placed in the stack makes no sense to explain what causes the stack in the first place.
As for the foundation, again, there is no justification at all for why it picks any foundation over any other.
Once more, you lack an explanation for the directionality.
So once more, why does it stack from the bottom up?
Why not from the top, down?
Why not from left, right?
Why not from outside, in?
Do you have an explanation, or just more avoidance?