From: BURT on
Infinite weight is of course a violation of mathematical law. The only
thing that goes infinite is sizes of infinity of the infinitely small.

Black holes violate laws. We are not seeing them.

Mitch Raemsch
From: bert on
On Jul 30, 7:36 pm, BURT <macromi...(a)yahoo.com> wrote:
> Infinite weight is of course a violation of mathematical law. The only
> thing that goes infinite is sizes of infinity of the infinitely small.
>
> Black holes violate laws. We are not seeing them.
>
> Mitch Raemsch

Gravity creates weight so the answer is it adds to the BH
gravitation TreBert
From: DougC on
BURT blurts:

> Black holes violate laws. We are not seeing them.

We are not seeing them because of the laws. Black holes have such
extreme gravity that light cannot escape from them. That is why we
don't see them. No violation. Write that down.

Doug Chandler

From: BURT on
On Jul 30, 10:12 pm, DougC <priga...(a)aol.com> wrote:
>  BURT blurts:
>
> > Black holes violate laws. We are not seeing them.
>
> We are not seeing them because of the laws.  Black holes have such
> extreme gravity that light cannot escape from them.  That is why we
> don't see them.  No violation.  Write that down.
>
> Doug Chandler

If light doesn't slow down in empty space it has no escape velocity
like matter. Outgoing light cannot be dragged backward into a black
hole. Gravity can never overcome light.

Mitch Raemsch
From: DougC on
BURT wrote:
>
> If light doesn't slow down in empty space it has no escape velocity
> like matter. Outgoing light cannot be dragged backward into a black
> hole. Gravity can never overcome light.

Gravity bends light. Easily observed. Look up "lensing."

Light does not reflect when it hits a black hole. That's why it
remains black and why it is called a hole.

Doug Chandler
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