The wisdom

Pointless Posts, Raves n Rants, Obscure Opinions

Moderator: Moderators

Holyspirit213
Banned
Banned
Posts: 107
Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2012 12:48 am

The wisdom

Post #1

Post by Holyspirit213 »

The science evolves around the evolution theory. Evolution theory is then transferred into many types of given subjects. Mc(2) does indeed play a big part in gravitational pull but it does not play any part in the negative push. Can anyone here explain the gravitational pull without interfering with the shockwave

User avatar
McCulloch
Site Supporter
Posts: 24063
Joined: Mon May 02, 2005 9:10 pm
Location: Toronto, ON, CA
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: The gravity pull and negative push

Post #11

Post by McCulloch »

Holyspirit213 wrote: The galaxy is surrounded by masses of gas known as the milky way.
This is wrong. Our galaxy is known as the milky way, because in a clear sky, when we look at it (we are near the edge) the stars appear so close together and numerous that it looks like spilled milk on the sky.
Holyspirit213 wrote: The milky way consists of particle I.e dust and fuse. The fuse then is transferred into bionic whims and then the whims is replicated to a degree of gas. The gas is equal to the amount of hallucins in your body. Now, my question is why are fuse and hallucins equal to a mass of electric activity comparable as a lightining if lightnings can't hold any electrons?
What cnorman said.
Examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
First Epistle to the Church of the Thessalonians
The truth will make you free.
Gospel of John

User avatar
ThatGirlAgain
Prodigy
Posts: 2961
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 1:09 pm
Location: New York City
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #12

Post by ThatGirlAgain »

cnorman18 wrote: Reminds me of a question that many pondered in my youth:

"If you were walking down the street with a canoe on your head and the wheels fell off, how many pancakes would it take to cover a doghouse?"

Of course, that one has long since been answered:

"Thirteen, because ice cream doesn't have bones."

That question is actually less nonsensical than either of the ones proposed here, because the words it contains actually have coherent meaning.
You need an infinite number of pancakes to cover a doghouse because the dog would always eat half of the ones you just put on.

Rocky Road has bones. But it is not kosher.

But is the question less or more nonsensical than this? (Which is itself more or less nonsensical.)
Dogmatism and skepticism are both, in a sense, absolute philosophies; one is certain of knowing, the other of not knowing. What philosophy should dissipate is certainty, whether of knowledge or ignorance.
- Bertrand Russell

cnorman18

Post #13

Post by cnorman18 »

ThatGirlAgain wrote:
cnorman18 wrote: Reminds me of a question that many pondered in my youth:

"If you were walking down the street with a canoe on your head and the wheels fell off, how many pancakes would it take to cover a doghouse?"

Of course, that one has long since been answered:

"Thirteen, because ice cream doesn't have bones."

That question is actually less nonsensical than either of the ones proposed here, because the words it contains actually have coherent meaning.
You need an infinite number of pancakes to cover a doghouse because the dog would always eat half of the ones you just put on.

Rocky Road has bones. But it is not kosher.

But is the question less or more nonsensical than this? (Which is itself more or less nonsensical.)
Wow! That -- Dialectical Dematerialism of the Whatchamadingus from Whosis, or whatever it was -- was the most astonishing example of pure "Academese" that I've ever seen. Absolutely unintelligible.

C. S. Lewis once remarked that it ought to be a requirement for graduation from any seminary to take a difficult passage from some German theologian and express it in words that could be understood by a person with a fourth-grade education. His contention was that if you can't do that, you don't understand it either; you just know how to throw the big words around.

Fides et Veritas

Post #14

Post by Fides et Veritas »

Has anyone stopped to ask if this guy is posting his madlib pages on here? :-k

It sure looks like it!!

The moon is a satellite that revolves around the earth. It is a barren landscape of crags and craters. It's gravitational pull is what causes our tides to rise and fall along the ocean. #-o

The moon is a monkey that revolves around the orange plate. It is a barren landscape of pistachios and laser beams. It's unisex pull is what causes our reproduction cycle to rise and fall along the fruited plains. :whistle:

or

The moon is a enzyme that revolves around the nuclei of infinity. It is a barren landscape of x and y coordinates and y=mx+b. It's conventional equational pull is what causes our anaplasmosis to rise and fall along the mitochondrion melanoma.


Huh? :confused2:

Suluby
Apprentice
Posts: 128
Joined: Sun Jan 10, 2010 6:11 am
Location: NJ

Post #15

Post by Suluby »

Fides et Veritas wrote: Has anyone stopped to ask if this guy is posting his madlib pages on here? :-k

It sure looks like it!!

The moon is a satellite that revolves around the earth. It is a barren landscape of crags and craters. It's gravitational pull is what causes our tides to rise and fall along the ocean. #-o

The moon is a monkey that revolves around the orange plate. It is a barren landscape of pistachios and laser beams. It's unisex pull is what causes our reproduction cycle to rise and fall along the fruited plains. :whistle:

or

The moon is a enzyme that revolves around the nuclei of infinity. It is a barren landscape of x and y coordinates and y=mx+b. It's conventional equational pull is what causes our anaplasmosis to rise and fall along the mitochondrion melanoma.


Huh? :confused2:

MADLIBS!!! :dance:

Thanks, Fides .......that has been bugging me ALL night!! That word just wouldn't come out of my head!


.

User avatar
ThatGirlAgain
Prodigy
Posts: 2961
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 1:09 pm
Location: New York City
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #16

Post by ThatGirlAgain »

Suluby wrote:
Fides et Veritas wrote: Has anyone stopped to ask if this guy is posting his madlib pages on here? :-k

It sure looks like it!!

The moon is a satellite that revolves around the earth. It is a barren landscape of crags and craters. It's gravitational pull is what causes our tides to rise and fall along the ocean. #-o

The moon is a monkey that revolves around the orange plate. It is a barren landscape of pistachios and laser beams. It's unisex pull is what causes our reproduction cycle to rise and fall along the fruited plains. :whistle:

or

The moon is a enzyme that revolves around the nuclei of infinity. It is a barren landscape of x and y coordinates and y=mx+b. It's conventional equational pull is what causes our anaplasmosis to rise and fall along the mitochondrion melanoma.


Huh? :confused2:

MADLIBS!!! :dance:

Thanks, Fides .......that has been bugging me ALL night!! That word just wouldn't come out of my head!


.
You could have hit the Random Word button.

BTW I like how you add lines at the end with nothing being visible.





.
Dogmatism and skepticism are both, in a sense, absolute philosophies; one is certain of knowing, the other of not knowing. What philosophy should dissipate is certainty, whether of knowledge or ignorance.
- Bertrand Russell

Holyspirit213
Banned
Banned
Posts: 107
Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2012 12:48 am

Post #17

Post by Holyspirit213 »

If the earth is dealt around the moon, then how can the sun produce heat? If the moon consists of below level temperature and is blocking the sun, then how is moon lasted and then heat have enough heat to hit our layer of temperature?

Fides et Veritas

Post #18

Post by Fides et Veritas »

Holyspirit213 wrote: If the earth is dealt around the moon, then how can the sun produce heat? If the moon consists of below level temperature and is blocking the sun, then how is moon lasted and then heat have enough heat to hit our layer of temperature?

If a Duck isn't a Chicken, a Chicken isn't a Turkey and a Turkey isn't a Duck... How then is there a scrumptiously edible Turducken?

The great and tasty mysteries of our lives.
Last edited by Fides et Veritas on Fri Jun 15, 2012 10:08 am, edited 1 time in total.

cnorman18

Post #19

Post by cnorman18 »

Holyspirit213 wrote: If the earth is dealt around the moon, then how can the sun produce heat? If the moon consists of below level temperature and is blocking the sun, then how is moon lasted and then heat have enough heat to hit our layer of temperature?
Set your house on fire. Now place a rock the size of a basketball between yourself and the fire.

Does the rock melt? Does it block the heat from the fire?

Do you know that the Sun is rather bigger than it appears in the sky? Bigger than the Moon, and bigger than even the Earth -- several THOUSAND TIMES bigger, in fact?

Have you ever been to school? Have you ever read a book without pictures?

User avatar
LiamOS
Site Supporter
Posts: 3645
Joined: Sat Mar 20, 2010 4:52 pm
Location: Ireland

Post #20

Post by LiamOS »

'The wisdom' is knowing the difference between a duck.

Post Reply