Grinagh
Grinagh t1_j9n4ps7 wrote
Reply to Honest question, what if we accepted the assumption that God created the universe 6,000 years ago, could this explain away dark matter and galaxy rotation? by DrMilzie
When Newton could not explain the motion of Mercury through his laws of Gravitation, he stated that maybe Jesus had come to Earth to adjust the Heavens.
Centuries later Albert Einstein showed that relativity explained the difference in motion because Mercury experiences time dilation close to the sun.
Grinagh t1_j8c99tz wrote
Reply to comment by WingedSeven in Del The Funky Homosapien - If You Must [Rap] by WingedSeven
Or else you be funky
Grinagh t1_j8c8smm wrote
Reply to comment by sillsic in jflaxman by b00giemane
What has 12 wheels, and flies?
Grinagh t1_j6evpzy wrote
Reply to In 40 years life expectancy will be higher by old people still drinking energy drinks. by [deleted]
You do realize that there is a finite number of beats for your heart, it's the first muscle to form and short of miraculous medical innovation to regrow cardiac tissue right now the best we have is a heart transplant and that carries with it some very real complications. That being said the more your heart beats, the sooner your death đ
Grinagh t1_j6ebwaq wrote
Reply to comment by limacharley in One day, being a millionaire is not going to be considered rich. by Coronazonewearmask
Agreed but more to the point, the future doesn't look very good considering all things emerging at the same time, robotics, AI, fusion, climate change, inverted population growth.
Already the cracks are appearing, COVID was just the first modern hurdle we faced and like a Fatman trying to launch over it we jammed our balls hard on the hurdle and ate pavement face first.
We are not going to have it any easier as disruptions become a regular way of life leaving billions poor, hungry and dumb. The society that will exist in 2100 will be unimaginable to us despite it only being a lifetime away.
Grinagh t1_j5uofwm wrote
Since OP is a bit daffy, deer, kangaroos have as powerful if not more so, can they do a roundhouse? No but few animals would be able to given that bipedalism isn't common. Then again there are animals that can exert as much force as a fired .22 round and they are smaller than us, so I don't know how OP would interpret those animals in his comparison.
Grinagh t1_j5kqcco wrote
Reply to comment by menlindorn in Rep. Lauren Boebert Introduces the Defund Planned Parenthood Act by everlovingkindness
Whatever you say Boss Hogg
Grinagh t1_j3m2mnn wrote
Reply to Can someone explain what spacetime is? by Dusthip
The best I can explain is to describe a black hole, because of the objects density it warps space, but space is not just empty nothingness, it has fundamental properties of the 3 dimensions we're familiar with but in addition to this black holes also warp time around them causing time to pass by slower the closer one gets to the event horizon. An outside observer would not experience this time dilation so years would pass for them whereas if you journeyed around a black hole potentially only hours would pass for you and this is because time is inseparable from space itself. Matter tells spacetime how to bend and spacetime tells matter how to move.
Grinagh t1_j3d553c wrote
Reply to No one seems to realize that if we âEnd agingâ we are destined to spend most of that time alone, trapped or crushed, or floating through space, barely remembering anyone or anything that happened to you. by Thedaulilamahimself
Someone is confusing an end to aging with indestructibility.
Grinagh t1_j2eqfe3 wrote
Reply to Human loss-of-function serotonin receptors associated with obesity and maladaptive behavior, study finds by lolfuys
I feel like this is yet another reason SSRI's are bad
Grinagh t1_j2bxeza wrote
Reply to comment by Navvana in Before Newton, how did people explain falling apples? by maugustus
Newton actually saw a limitation of his theory in the motion of mercury since it requires relativity to explain its motion.
Grinagh t1_j20oait wrote
Michio Kaku is hardly an authority on anything, he likes to talk about things far in the future as if we are only decades from their implementation.
Grinagh t1_j1q7ll2 wrote
Reply to Is it possible to Live Forever? by gg2ezpzlemonsqz
The Egyptians believed that we have 3 deaths, once we die, the second when everyone who knew you in life dies and finally when your name is mentioned for the last time
But I'm sure you mean biologically, maybe. When one hopes for immortality, the better postulation is why? Unless you can live in a body you want to, not much point in being immortal.
Grinagh t1_izokr8v wrote
Reply to Heresiarch's Semenary, me, digital, 2022 by calsino
Oh life on the outside ain't what it used to be
Grinagh t1_iywyge6 wrote
Reply to Wake up, people by h4clovecory
This person clearly needs a dog you either get up now, or clean up pee later.
Grinagh t1_iy10u39 wrote
Yeah and if we could capture the hydrogen from termites eating waste paper we'd have enough hydrogen to power the world and just as much CO2 as if we were still burning coal. Useless technology.
Grinagh t1_ixdvmcn wrote
Reply to Sheep flocks operate as a type of âcollective intelligenceâ and elect temporary leaders to guide them while moving. The fluidity of this process is extremely surprising. by nimobo
I'm convinced that the sheep password is even more real now.
Grinagh t1_iv123ng wrote
Reply to comment by matchstick_s in How accurate are the "5 stages of grief" to model behavior during the loss of an important person? by pororoca_surfer
Yeah, we all muse about not knowing how much time any of us have, but when it's spelled out by a doctor, suddenly the tragedy hits home and people breakdown because, "how could this happen to them!"
PS the same 5 stages are felt when you have no tp in a public bathroom
Grinagh t1_iup4qpx wrote
If you don't know how you got here, you're not likely to know where things are headed.
Besides Cosmos and Connections are amazing.
Grinagh t1_iui3q1u wrote
Reply to comment by sindagh in Why does the elevation of Greenland sink to near or below sea level in the center? by ILikePenguinss
From 1955 to 1985 Superior had a foot of change, were it to be measured today the expectation is that a similar finding would be observed.
Grinagh t1_iug8uvi wrote
Reply to comment by itchy_cheeseborn in âLostâ, me, oil paint, 2022 by PsychologicalPay3478
SASUKE!
Grinagh t1_iueyete wrote
Raises questions about whether this exists in the core of our planet as iron and nickel make up the core but phosphorus could easily be there too.
Grinagh t1_iueghn9 wrote
Reply to comment by CrustalTrudger in Why does the elevation of Greenland sink to near or below sea level in the center? by ILikePenguinss
This is the same reason why lake Superior is draining slowly because the weight of the ice sheet is no longer bowing down the surrounding land.
Grinagh t1_iu2g6ib wrote
Reply to comment by surelythisisoriginal in It's weird that diamonds are so valuable. They're just shiny objects. by SenorDipstick
The reality is the commercial diamond market is largely dominated by industrial use, the tiny portion that is used in jewelry is a marketing campaign like you said from the 1950's like much of the marriage-industrial complex.
Grinagh t1_jbvlu95 wrote
Reply to Salad Fingers, acrylic on canvas by MrFuckingDinkles
pallid fingers