Hollow earth

by Jrjw 34 Replies latest watchtower scandals

  • waton
    waton

    just to play along what a hollow earth would feel like to live in. Assuming that the centre is hollow, a round cavity, there would be no gravity there.

    You could push yourself off the inner wall under England and float to Australia, envied by the kangaroos, but take a cushion along, the arrival would be as strong as your departure.

    we know now that zero gravity has grave consequences on our bodies, including the brain. living inside a hollow earth would simulate that.

    it was also skew our seismic findings, change the mass of the Earth, it's relationship to the moon, shift the barycenters.

    Present a perspective with wrong priorities, like wt's performance record. .

  • _Morpheus
    _Morpheus

    Definition of theory

    plural theories
    1: a plausible or scientifically acceptable general principle or body of principles offered to explain phenomena
    • the wave theory of light
  • jp1692
    jp1692
    They don't get the accolade of "theory" until they have been proven correct.

    Actually this is not accurate. In science, a hypothesis only becomes a theory when it is well-supported by an abundance of evidence and there is a consensus among scientists in that field. We must always allow for the possibility the our theories are inaccurate, perhaps only in the details, or possibly even completely wrong.

    Consider this from Merriam-Webster:

    In scientific reasoning, a hypothesis is constructed before any applicable research has been done. A theory, on the other hand, is supported by evidence: it's a principle formed as an attempt to explain things that have already been substantiated by data.“

    When scientists use the word “theory” we have a very specific and precise meaning that is usually lacking in general discourse among non-scientists. A hypothesis, as a tentative explanation of a particular phenomenon, does not become a theory overnight. It often takes considerable time, rigorous research, careful experimentation and/or data collections as well as peer-review.

    Check out this short essay from the National Science Teachers Association on the subject:

    In particular, I really appreciated this comment from that essay: “All of our current understanding of scientific phenomena is theoretical and could be revised in a heartbeat if commendable and repeatable evidence falsifies it and supports a new theory.”

    The truth and beauty of science is that all of “our explanations are tentative and open to challenge,” but you better have some damn good evidence supported by sound logical reasoning and a solid methodological approach!

    Conspiracy “theorists” in tin-foil hats need not apply.

  • Onager
    Onager

    I first encountered the Hollow Earth idea when I read the book "Can you Speak Venusian" by Patrick Moore. That book was first published in 1972, so it's really not a new theory!

    It's a fun and interesting read, I'd rate it along side Flim-Flam by James Randi for looking at and addressing the cuckoo ideas that people have.

  • dropoffyourkeylee
    dropoffyourkeylee

    Maybe we can use hollow earth theory to disprove the flat earth theory, and vice versa. Solves two problems at once!

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