From: Sam Wormley on
On 2/10/10 5:59 PM, NoEinstein wrote:
> From my college days I�ve observed the irrationality of much of
> physics.

In other words, you didn't do so well in physics!
From: nuny on
On Feb 10, 3:59 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote:
> Yesterday, I happened to tune-in for the last half of a TV program
> about the Moon.  Time and again, the supposed technical experts who
> were being interviewed referred to the ‘pull’ of gravity between the
> Earth and the Moon.  The effect of that… “pull” was discussed as
> relates to such things as ocean tides

Please explain ocean tides with push gravity.


Mark L. Fergerson
From: BURT on
On Feb 10, 5:13 pm, "n...(a)bid.nes" <alien8...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Feb 10, 3:59 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
> > Yesterday, I happened to tune-in for the last half of a TV program
> > about the Moon.  Time and again, the supposed technical experts who
> > were being interviewed referred to the ‘pull’ of gravity between the
> > Earth and the Moon.  The effect of that… “pull” was discussed as
> > relates to such things as ocean tides
>
>   Please explain ocean tides with push gravity.
>
>   Mark L. Fergerson

The ocean is pushed toward the Moon..

Mitch Raemsch
From: john on
On Feb 10, 7:13 pm, "n...(a)bid.nes" <alien8...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> On Feb 10, 3:59 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
> > Yesterday, I happened to tune-in for the last half of a TV program
> > about the Moon.  Time and again, the supposed technical experts who
> > were being interviewed referred to the ‘pull’ of gravity between the
> > Earth and the Moon.  The effect of that… “pull” was discussed as
> > relates to such things as ocean tides
>
>   Please explain ocean tides with push gravity

First explain how every particle of the universe
can produce unlimited radiations which travel outward from
said particles while all the while providing inward impetus
to anything with which they interact.
Don't you think that's stretching it just a tad?
('Course since then there's DM, DE, so really,
suck gravity is hardly outrageous at all compared
to 'intellectuallizing' a whole new class of matter,
sight unseen )('Course, if it's invisible, well, it's
invisible- but we prove it's there by pointing to
the movements of stars that occasioned its creation
in the first place.So it's real yin/yangy, y'know.)

But the tide thing- really, everything at this scale-
works exactly the same for push as for pull.
Just at larger sizes, where planets
are able to completely shadow push from the other side,
surface gravity will tend towards a limit- therefore ruling out
the whole black hole paradox.

john
From: nuny on
On Feb 10, 10:24 pm, john <vega...(a)accesscomm.ca> wrote:
> On Feb 10, 7:13 pm, "n...(a)bid.nes" <alien8...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Feb 10, 3:59 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
> > > Yesterday, I happened to tune-in for the last half of a TV program
> > > about the Moon.  Time and again, the supposed technical experts who
> > > were being interviewed referred to the ‘pull’ of gravity between the
> > > Earth and the Moon.  The effect of that… “pull” was discussed as
> > > relates to such things as ocean tides
>
> >   Please explain ocean tides with push gravity

(snip whining)

> really, everything at this scale-
> works exactly the same for push as for pull.

Nonsense. Push gravity claims the moon shadows the gravitation from
the rest of the universe on the surface of the Earth directly under
the moon, which raises the tides on the ocean under the moon.

What about the equally raised tide on the side of the Earth exactly
opposite the Moon?


Mark L. Fergerson