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On 7 Dec, 16:46, Richard Clark wrote:
On Fri, 7 Dec 2007 14:53:09 -0800 (PST), art wrote: Somebody somewhere has obviously postulated that gravitational forces are every where which puts science back in the stone ages. Hi Art, It was some schlemiel called Isaac Newton. He offered a very simple equation you probably are not familiar with: G times the Mass of Body A time the Mass of Body B divided by distance between them squared This English clown's theory was put into a cocked hat by Einstein - so you two have something in common! 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC I did not know that equation. Einstein said a lot of things and was often proved in error. Did he mention equilibrium or the other laws like: Every action has an equal and opposite reaction? For that matter how many laws of Newton did he put down? Any idea where I can read up on that and how he arrived at that conclusion? Seems odd that we have so many gravity centers in this universe and a neutral point never occurs.....anywhere. Some of those stationary things in the sky must be holding on to a piece of string tied to the moon No. I do not have any books on Einstein but do have Planck and I don't recall him mentioning that.Is it just called Einsteins Law of ??????? Art Oh, and another thing why are you injecting the word "clown"? Are you reverting to your old tricks or did you just slip up? |
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