Richard wrote,
On 09 Feb 2004 20:28:28 GMT, (Tdonaly) wrote:
They change but they don't move.
73,
Tom Donaly
Gads Tom,
That will have him putting on his Galileo masquerade next. ;-)
I'm still waiting for that act where Cecileo drops his balls off the
Tower of Pisa.
I can anticipate the Cecilean logic now:
The balls, falling, traverse half the distance in half the time;
hence with each half of the remaining distance, half that time;
as there is always half the distance to go, they never hit;
ergo gravity does not exist!
If gravity does not exist, no test need be performed
(followed by 600 posts about the current in the Tiber).
[note: there is more than one error in this; however, I would just as
soon see which of his balls drops the farthest even if they don't hit
the ground.]
73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC
Hi Richard,
I didn't think he'd get it, but that's o.k. It's getting so
the only way to post to this newsgroup is to write little Zen riddles
and let Cecil meditate his way to enlightenment, since mathematical
logic, and experiment are against his principles. Salvation through
enlightenment is an old concept in the Far East where it has always
worked well. It should work even better way out in the Texas
wasteland where Cecil keeps his abode, since there's very little out
there to disturb his meditation.
73,
Tom Donaly, KA6RUH