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

Buoyancy is dependent on gravity, or some other force to push/pull things, so you're defeating yourself here. You still have to account for this external force, which means that you haven't provided an alternative to gravitational theory.

The buoyancy argument is seriously disinfo. If you want to dive into the flat earth space, you need to have a complete understanding of the system you're trying to disprove, and not just parrot things you've heard.

The only viable alternative system to gravity that I've seen is the theory Tesla believed in which describes a magno-electric universe.

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

You make claims, with no proof to back it up, but that is how it always been with gravity. A object seeks its natural buoyancy level, I do not know what that is so hard to understand. The more dense a object is, the lower its buoyancy level is. Once a object has reached its buoyancy level, it is not going to move up or down, unless outside forces affect it (like the wind).

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– Poiuytrew 1 point 4 years ago +1 / -0

I'm not pushing gravity, I'm explaining that buoyancy is not a replacement to gravity.

Why do more dense objects always fall towards the earth? Because boyuancy is dependent on an external force to provide directionality.

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

Ok, glad you are not pushing gravity. Here you can see a experiment on how a object finds it buoyancy level based on its relative surroundings.

https://youtu.be/fnVLwqud_OA

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– Turtlew0rk 1 point 4 years ago +1 / -0

You are still not explaining what causes an object to find is buoyancy level. What force is acting on the object and is determined by its density? Helium rises and everything else sits on the surface normally? Nothing in between that would find its level at 5ft in the air or something?

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