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1) Remember, it's only a "theory"
2) Do you also think that God makes things stick together - giving the impression of gravity?
3) Do you think gravity was intelligently designed?
4) Are you totally insane?

2007-11-14 03:52:50 · 23 answers · asked by I'm an Atheist 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Gravity is not a law, it'a a theory. Are you confusing the Theory of Gravity with Kepler's three LAWs of GRAVITATION? A theory is much more encompassing than a mere Law. A law might state the mathematical formular for the elliptical motion of a planet around the Sun, but a theory encompases MANY laws and is tested and is applied in many braches of science such as cosmology and space travel.

2007-11-14 04:05:22 · update #1

... not to mention Newton's Laws of Gravitation

2007-11-14 04:12:57 · update #2

23 answers

not exactly, facts are minute in themselves..

to the 2 above, gravitation is STILL theory...

1. theories hold more water than facts
2. no
3. no
4. no

2007-11-14 03:56:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

Which theory of gravity do you mean?

Newton's Theory ( Includes the law F = G m1 * m2 / ( r^2 ) )
Einstein's General Theory of Relativity
Dickie's scalar tensor theory of Relativity
String Theory/superstring theory/M-theory
Loop Quantum Gravity
Geometrodynamics
Wheeler-deWitt Equation
Supergravity
AdS/CFT correspondence
Euclidean quantum gravity
Causal Sets
Twistor theory
Sakharov induced gravity
Regge calculus
Acoustic metric and other analog models of gravity
Causal Dynamical Triangulation

or some other one?

Gravity is a fact. Things do fall down. There are many theories of Gravitation which attempt to explain it. None entirely satisfactorily.

A fact is a statement about reality for which the evidence is so strong that to disbelieve it would be simply foolish.

A theory is "a coherent group of general propositions used as principles of explanation for a class of phenomena" [Random House American College Dictionary]. The term does not imply tentativeness or lack of certainty. For instance Human Sexual Reproduction is the theory that explains where babies come from.

A law is a statement describing a relationship observed to be invariable between or among phenomena for all cases in which the specified conditions are met. Usually laws are written in the form of equations and can be part of a theory. Laws are not guarrantied to be correct by any means.

Theories do not become laws. Theories can contain laws.

So to answer: Gravity can be a fact, a law, or a theory depending on context.

2007-11-14 03:58:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

1) As stated several times previously, gravity is one of the basic laws of physics - it is not a "theory". And yes, I'm fully aware of Kepler's Laws.

2) "Impression of gravity"? WTFk? Are you floating away off into space? Do we still have atmosphere and oceans? When did we suddenly develop "virtual gravity"? Take your meds.

3) See answer #2 re: your meds.

4) Yes. But that's beside the point. Dumbass questions like this are totally interfering with the ebb and flow of my conversations with the cosmic forces and throwing my chi out of alignment. Stop stepping on my karma.

2007-11-14 04:10:18 · answer #3 · answered by badkitty1969 7 · 0 1

the position you there at the same time as Newton died? You communicate of billions of years and then espouse creation! A contradiction in words as area is an extremely detached position as astronomers and astronauts understand in difficulty-free words too properly. Gravity is not in basic terms an Earthbound element notwithstanding that's likewise to do with the sunlight and the moon. you're indulging in mythology of the worst type and reconcile your idea with reality and not superstition.

2016-10-24 05:35:52 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1.) Gravity can be measured. Therefore it's a proven theory.
2.) no.
3.) no.
4.) It's entirely possible.

2007-11-14 03:56:48 · answer #5 · answered by Darkwolf 5 · 3 0

Actually, Gravity isn't a theory. It's a Law, Mr. Smarts.

EDIT: Actually, I was referring to Sir Isaac Newton's Universal Law of Gravity, which states that each body in the universe attracts another. Now, I haven't had any Physics since grad school, so if I'm wrong, please refute my claim with further evidence.

2007-11-14 03:56:30 · answer #6 · answered by Kemp the Mad African 4 · 6 2

This is just for fun, but do you actually know why gravity happens or how it works? There are a some hypothesis out there, like gravitrons and stuff, but no one knows because it is untestable. To say you are positive it is gravitrons would be similar to saying you are positive all life on earth is the result of slow genetic changes over long periods of time.

2007-11-14 03:58:08 · answer #7 · answered by The GMC 6 · 0 2

Gravity is a law and a part of the creation package.

2007-11-14 04:14:14 · answer #8 · answered by Nina, BaC 7 · 0 1

No.
1. I remember.
2. God's love makes things stick together.
3. Yes
4. Absolutely.

2007-11-14 03:56:49 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

The first two posts are dead on correct. Gravity, like thermodynamics, is a LAW, not a theory. And really, you are not even using the word theory correct here.

2007-11-14 03:59:01 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

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