cantonear1968
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2009
- Messages
- 1,657
Part II?????

You've got to be kidding me? How?
You've got to be kidding me? How?
So, obviously by changing the scale of this experiment( in this case the only thing that has been scaled differently is separation of the papers) one can have the brick either be stopped by a series of papers, or be stopped at FIRST impact. In fact there is an infinite number of choices of separation and simply adjusting this one parameter could have the brick stop at any number of passages through the papers.
One could scale this to either stop, or not stop, the brick.
What numbers? Please show me where Cole uses numbers, or that they are necessary in his experiments.
Moot point.
He could simply cite my last post
Part II?????
You've got to be kidding me? How?
Or, it must be spelled out, it's also possible the brick will not stop at all until it hit the large mass providing the gravity. In this case, the earth.
Otherwise, I suspect FalseFlag will attempt to use your argument to claim that you admitted even a brick will be slowed to a stop by thin sheets of paper - exactly as claimed by Cole in his poorly-designed experiment, and he will argue that scale doesn't matter.
Again!
Yes.
Yep. Same mistake again, same wrong conclusion again.
What statement is wrong?I'm not looking for answers, FF, I am looking for some semblance of understanding. Some glimmer of hope that you aren't beyond help. Some tiny little thing which suggests you have some cognitive powers capable of seeing how wrong you have been to date. Your post 2319 is just full of wrongness, on an epic and embarrassing scale.
If you ask a question, you need to provide the answer to it. Don't expect me to continue to play your games.There's hope!
So why doesn't your famous equal and opposite reaction apply to the teacup under the ton of concrete falling from a thousand feet, but yet does apply to a floor some 15 feet away?
Exactly as I said... you'll decide, based on your understanding. So we're back to the circular reasoning loop (a logical fallacy) - that is, if your "basic science" understanding is wrong, and you're rejecting others' claims based on your "basic science" understanding, then you're rejecting perfectly good explanations based on your own misinformed view. The issue then becomes how do we calibrate your understanding of "basic science"?
You're demanding we take your word for it. Please establish it.
Define 'proof' - you've said words won't do, that only an experiment will. Will your proof be in the form of an experiment, or just words?
You just said YOU get to be the arbiter of who's right and who's wrong... here's your exact words: "I will tell you whether or not it conforms to or rejects basic science..."
You'll decide who's right and who's wrong, based on your understanding of the world.
Of course you will rule in your favor (won't you?) and decide anyone with a conflicting opinion is wrong (won't you?)
That's exactly what I said: "So all you're really saying is you'll accept the opinions of those who agree with you, and reject everything else."
Hank
Bump for FalseFlag since he asked for a proof that Cole's experiments are wrong (includes the experiment that he requested in the other thread):
I've just started to watch Cole's second video.
He chooses an arbitrary and very short separation between planks. It can be shown that separation between floors is a determinant factor in whether the collapse will arrest or not. Larger distances mean the falling block will have a better chance to recover speed thanks to the acceleration of gravity, and end up impacting the next plank with more, rather than less, speed.
He didn't lay his planks at a distance of 12 feet from each other, and his choice of distance causes arrest. He doesn't justify that weird choice with maths derived from the scaling of the WTC towers.
[qimg]http://www.formauri.es/personal/pgimeno/xfiles/11-s/Cole-arrest.jpg[/qimg]
He just disregards scale issues when he chooses the separation between planks.
Furthermore, the very fact that the mass of one plank is not enough to cause the collapse of the rest, is indication that his model is not representative of the collapses. Take a look at the Metabunk thread that JayDeeHess has posted at least a couple of times, to see an experiment that proves Cole's one wrong.
Here's a video from that thread:
That video shows an instance of an experiment (still ongoing as far as I can tell) that proves that Cole's conclusion:
[qimg]http://www.formauri.es/personal/pgimeno/xfiles/11-s/Cole-conclusion.jpg[/qimg]
is WRONG !
ETA:
Done.
The Metabunk thread: https://www.metabunk.org/towards-a-...ive-collapse-of-the-wtc-towers-on-9-11.t7396/
(It's behind a CloudFlare barrier so I can only read it by using some special means).
Okay. But the magnitudes of forces are important, because:
The magnitudes of the forces generated in Cole's experiment were not comparable to the magnitudes of the forces in the tower collapses on 9/11. Cole didn't even attempt to measure them. Therefore one should not expect the results to be similar.
While there is a normal force in electromagnetics, it has reference in forces on a mass. Two different items.
"Normal" simply means " perpendicular. In this case perpendicular to the surface an object lies on. In this case since the angle between object, the tower, and surface, Manhattan, is π/2 and cos(π/2)=1, the "Normal force" is equal and opposite to the supplied force due to gravity.
Bump for FalseFlag who hasn't acknowledged his mistake:
Newton's first law proves that your understanding of Newton's third law is wrong.
Had the forces been equal, the movement would stop there [ETA: on first contact, to be precise].
You left out one scenario I'd be most interested in hearing your views on... what happens if floor 2 and 3 break into large free-falling chunks at the moment of impact? What happens to floor 1 in that case?
Care to discuss?
Hank
PS: Extra Credit: Which scenario did Cole's experiment test?
Sheer repetition of the same mantra and refusal to concede any point.
We're on like the sixth iteration of the JFK assassination thread here.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=297389
Hank
They are not necessarily equal because they are different forces, not constituting an action-reaction pair where Newton's third law would apply.
A pancake collapse FEMA-style. Why else would he conclude that the FEMA hypothesis of the collapse is wrong?What is Cole trying to replicate?
Is that what you do when someone meets your requests?I have already answered this too many times to count. Your refusal to accept this and then twist his experiments to support your own views is meaningless. It proves nothing, other that you will grasp at anything you can to try to prove he is wrong.
Keep playing your games. You certainly have the right to do so. Don't expect me to keep playing along. It's not going to happen.
Are you playing a game, or do you really believe this? If you really believe I am wrong, then you provide what you think the correct answer is.
You are wrong and your conclusion is ridiculous on this page too, and will continue to be ridiculous each time you repeat it, because you are still making the same mistake of applying Newton's third law to opposing forces that are not reaction forces.
In this particular instance, the reaction force of the struck stationary object upon the falling object is NOT necessarily equal to the gravitational force that's accelerating the falling object downward in the first place. They are not necessarily equal because they are different forces, not constituting an action-reaction pair where Newton's third law would apply.
If the reaction force happens to be greater, the falling object will indeed decelerate; if the reaction force happens to be less, the falling object will not decelerate; if they happen to be equal, the falling object will neither accelerate nor decelerate, but temporarily maintain a constant velocity for the duration of the crushing.
I'm not going to play FF's game and respond directly to his idiotic comments, but as one of the physics PhD's on this forum I'd like to point out exactly where he is wrong in his understanding of Newton's Laws as they relate to a stationary object resting on the surface of the Earth.
Firstly, where he claims there are two forces - the gravitational force acting downwards on the object, and the normal force acting upwards on the object - there are in fact four; he has not identified that there is also the gravitational force acting upwards on the Earth, and the normal force acting downwards on the Earth.
Secondly, he claims that Newton's Third Law requires that the gravitational force on the object is equal and opposite to the normal force on the object. This is incorrect. It is in fact Newton's Second Law that requires this. The acceleration of the object is zero, therefore the vector sum of the forces on it must be the product of the mass of the object and the acceleration; that is to say, zero. As there are only two forces acting on the object, they can only sum to zero if they are equal and opposite.
Thirdly, he fails to understand that Newton's Third Law requires two things: firstly, that the force of gravity exerted on the object is equal and opposite to the force of gravity exerted on the Earth; secondly, that the normal force exerted on the object is equal and opposite to the normal force exerted on the Earth.
Why not? Why won't you list examples? If you are so sure I'm wrong, post examples. Come on, you're the PhD. You are the supposed expert. For once, act like one.I'm not going to list examples of these misunderstandings; just scroll up. But I think it's important that someone who genuinely does understand the forces involved should point out what they actually are.
Dave