[Physics] gravity is NOT a force

Tufail Abbas tufail.abbas at gmail.com
Fri Jun 9 02:44:45 CEST 2017


Hello Tom,

You have nailed it.

You are right, that if something is something like nothing, then it is
impossible for it to distort. But, if what we have understood as nothing,
is not actually nothing but something, then it may turn into something else
or distort.

What if,  that something (which distorts) is actually very close to
something like nothing, Then if you add something else to that nothing,
then it creates the illusion of distortion of nothing. But in actuality
identity of nothing is still preserved despite illusion of something.

For example : if transparency = nothing then pure water  = nothing. If we
add colour to this water, then it is no more transparent , so it becomes
something. But instead of saying that it is now something,  we still prefer
tobsay that *nothing is now coloured*. By the same logic possibly, we have
declared that *space is nothing *and nothing is distorted.

Regards,

Tufail Abbas.

On Jun 8, 2017 10:18 PM, "carmam at tiscali.co.uk" <carmam at tiscali.co.uk>
wrote:

Tesla was correct on this one (and numerous others). Space is nothing. How
can nothing be distorted?
Tom Hollings.


----Original Message----
From: pifriedgut at statcourse.com
Date: 08/06/2017 15:15
To: <physics at tuks.nl>
Subj: [Physics] gravity is NOT a force

The effect of a mass is to distort the surrounding space-time continuum.
This distortion is proportional to the linear distance from the center of
the mass.


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