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4
One of the top results for, is gravity a theory, on ddg (ncse.ngo)
posted 4 years ago by Allas8 4 years ago by Allas8 +5 / -1
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– InfidelCastro11 1 point 4 years ago +1 / -0

But what determines which direction this happens in? This logically necessitates another force. It makes no sense otherwise

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– Allas8 [S] 1 point 4 years ago +1 / -0

The heavier, more dense, a object is, the lower its buoyancy level is. The more dense a object is, the further down it will fall. No more forces are needed, only different density and buoyancy levels.

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– InfidelCastro11 2 points 4 years ago +2 / -0

You do need a force. Things do not move without a force applied to them. Your worldview does not explain why denser objects don't fall sideways, it's basic logic that the direction things fall must be determined by something. Do you believe the earth is flat, by any chance

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– Allas8 [S] 0 points 4 years ago +1 / -1

that is up and down and how different density and buoyancy levels work

Yes and the force is called up and down. Once a object found it relevant buoyancy level, it will stay level, until a upward, or downward force is applied to it.

Why would things fall sideways? That makes no sense. I see no point in trying to explain why something does not do something it should not be doing.

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– InfidelCastro11 2 points 4 years ago +2 / -0

Up and down are directions, not forces. Why wouldn't things fall sideways?

I see no point in trying to explain why something does not do something

The point is that you don't fully understand whatever it is you're talking about if you can't do it. "It go up cause it do" is not complete.

Didn't answer my question, do you believe the earth is flat? If you don't then your take on buoyancy makes even less sense because "up" isn't a singular direction.

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