Re: Gravity
You seem confident of your geometry skills, so if I can't prove that pi is greater than 3, then where is the flaw in my write-up? I can't seem to find it, but, then, I am just a woman, so maybe you can point it out?
(Also, parallel lines do meet in the projective plane, which is a space that was invented to solve optical problems, such as the illusion that two parallel lines leading into the distance appear to touch infinitely far away. It is non-Euclidean geometry, thus things don't work in quite the usual way. No credible geometer would claim that parallel lines intersect in a Euclidean space. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_plane)
You seem confident of your geometry skills, so if I can't prove that pi is greater than 3, then where is the flaw in my write-up? I can't seem to find it, but, then, I am just a woman, so maybe you can point it out?
(Also, parallel lines do meet in the projective plane, which is a space that was invented to solve optical problems, such as the illusion that two parallel lines leading into the distance appear to touch infinitely far away. It is non-Euclidean geometry, thus things don't work in quite the usual way. No credible geometer would claim that parallel lines intersect in a Euclidean space. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_plane)
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