Re: Inertia and Aspect Experiments

From: John Sefton (vegan16_at_accesscomm.ca)
Date: 03/15/05


Date: Tue, 15 Mar 2005 13:02:30 -0600


Franz Heymann wrote:
> "CWatters" <colin.watters@pandoraBOX.be> wrote in message
> news:%5xZd.38033$yO1.3535931@phobos.telenet-ops.be...
>
>>"Parker" <whatishiggs@yahoo.com> wrote in message
>>news:1110863268.604975.45150@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
>>
>>>Hi,
>>>
>>>I'm reading John Gribbin's book "In Search of Schroedinger's Cat"
>>>and the following passage concerns me. Is Inertia a great puzzle
>>>as the author claimed, or is it solved 100% already??:
>>
>>Well think of it from an energy point of view. It takes energy to
>
> accelerate
>
>>mass. Therefore without a energy source things keep moving at
>
> whatever
>
>>velocity they have.
>
>
> Parker was talking about the conservation of momentum and you are
> talking about the conservation of mass.
> There is a connection between these concepts, but it is at a much
> deeper level than that at which you are pitching your reply.
>
>

If there were nothing in space, it would take
no energy to accelerate something.
The observation that it does, and that
this value is the same as with gravity,
proves that it is space that causes a
a body to gravitate, and not the opposite
(which leads to BHs and other exotic animules).
The Earth does not suck.
Can u say eeeeeeeeeeether?
John
P.S. push gravity? leSage theory?



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