Clayton Moore
Banned
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2008
- Messages
- 7,508
As you quoted earlier, gravitational acceleration is the acceleration of an object caused by gravity. If it speeds up in the 10 or so feet more than it slows down when it hits a lower floor, then overall there is speeding up by gravity collapse. If it slows down more than it was speeded up, then it stops. Therefore, saying that "There is no speeding up by gravity collapse" is about as wrong as it's possible to be; either there is speeding up, or there isn't a collapse. And, as a result of the speeding up, things hit each other at very high speeds, and some of those things are very fragile, like - for example - plasterboard and sheetrock, the source of the majority of the dust produced by the collapse. Therefore,
...is utterly wrong too; things falling from a thousand feet get pretty badly broken. And, because not everything hits everything else perfectly squarely, some things will get knocked sideways, so that,
...is wrong as well.
I'm not saying this to you, by the way. You've made it clear that you're unable to think rationally, that you fix on a belief then deny everything, however obvious, that disagrees with it. After all, if you can say in the same post that gravity accelerates things yet it doesn't speed them up, there's hardly any point expecting you to respond to reason from someone else; clearly, you can't even respond to your own reasoning. But there are sane and reasonable people reading this, and every now and then they delurk and mention how helpful it was that, when a belief-driven idealogue spouted absurdities, there was someone pointing out exactly how absurd they were.
Dave
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acceleration
That crap about things falling 10 feet crushing things and being crushed is oh so much crap. Drop a brick on another brick from 20 feet, 30 feet, 50 feet, 100 feet. And nothing gets crushed to dust.