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Hey Paine
Has your respondant not yet answered the SHQ 'Litmus Test'? If not, he's _never_ gonna present any rational discourse on the *cause* of gravity. However, in a moment of lucidity, he observed: Between any two masses there is a point where their mutual gravitational are nulled. This was predicted by Newton. ...But then tripped off with this improvisation: The implication of this attribute of the superfluid is that at *any* point in the universe, there is a huge number of flows intersecting in all directions at a huge range of speeds, yet somehow they don't affect each other, and only some of them push mass. This is highly implausible. Highly implausable indeed. Yes it is, and that's not what's happening. There is not a huge number of flows. There is one flow. There are what i call "buffering areas" between EFF's that are transitional areas... 'Member the oft-cited "immersed spheres" analogy. That's where you have two hollow spheres, each perforated wth many tiny holes, and each connected by a flex hose to the inlet of a waterpump. The spheres are immersed in a tank of water and the pump switched on. Each sphere intakes in a 'reverse starburst' pattern, generating its own EFF or "gravity field". A zone of lower pressure is created between the spheres, causing them to be _pushed_ toward each other. Now make the tank bigger, and use several spheres of different sizes, each connected by its own flex hose to the pump (notice there is stiil only one flow). All the spheres are again "attracted" toward one another, but in reality are being _pushed_ by One Force. Now, substitute a large mesh cage for the tank, Immerse the whole shebang in a flowing river. Have the same several spheres hooked to the same pump as before, but now immersed in the larger flow of the river. Now eliminate the cage altogether and let the spheres continue intaking as before, immersed in the flowing river. And notice that the river itself is impelled ultimately by the *same* One Force that drives the flow into each of the hollow perforated spheres. |
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