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Time Travel Discussion
Time travel a reality.... what do you think?
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<blockquote data-quote="Einstein" data-source="post: 85935" data-attributes="member: 288"><p>Harte</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I want to point out that what you are claiming is probably some technical detail that will have to be modified. All of our theory on force appears to be steered toward inertial force as being the only force of any concern. So there appears to be a very strong mathematical effort to make it so.</p><p></p><p>There is no sound mathematical framework for gravity at all. Yet right here in front of you is something obvious that could very easily become the factual foundation for an understanding of what gravity really is. I might point out that the acceleration computed is not associated with any current force present. There are two other physical observations in reality that have the same pattern. One is an object in orbit about the earth. The other is an object in gravitational free-fall within a vacuum. In both of those conditions the object is weightless.</p><p></p><p>Centrifugal force has its vector orientation away from the center. And the computed acceleration has its vector orientation directed away from the center. Gravitational weight and acceleration have vector orientations directed toward the center. It looks to me like we have equal behavior but opposite vector directions between gravity and centrifugal force. So for all intents and purposes this appears to be math based in a factual reality that does describe anti-gravity.</p><p></p><p>So I guess I'm off, sailing into the future. Just for clarification, which boat did you want to be on? The anti-gravity boat, or the curved space-time boat?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Einstein, post: 85935, member: 288"] Harte I want to point out that what you are claiming is probably some technical detail that will have to be modified. All of our theory on force appears to be steered toward inertial force as being the only force of any concern. So there appears to be a very strong mathematical effort to make it so. There is no sound mathematical framework for gravity at all. Yet right here in front of you is something obvious that could very easily become the factual foundation for an understanding of what gravity really is. I might point out that the acceleration computed is not associated with any current force present. There are two other physical observations in reality that have the same pattern. One is an object in orbit about the earth. The other is an object in gravitational free-fall within a vacuum. In both of those conditions the object is weightless. Centrifugal force has its vector orientation away from the center. And the computed acceleration has its vector orientation directed away from the center. Gravitational weight and acceleration have vector orientations directed toward the center. It looks to me like we have equal behavior but opposite vector directions between gravity and centrifugal force. So for all intents and purposes this appears to be math based in a factual reality that does describe anti-gravity. So I guess I'm off, sailing into the future. Just for clarification, which boat did you want to be on? The anti-gravity boat, or the curved space-time boat? [/QUOTE]
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Time travel a reality.... what do you think?
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