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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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taylornottyler (100 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
More noob questions
Just curious, when I'm at the "Home" page, some of the games I'm in have stars next to them like the stars that show up in threads you have posted in. What are these stars symbolizing?
7 replies
Open
flashman (2274 D(G))
14 Jul 10 UTC
Just been given a very decent bottle of wine (St Julien - 1990)
With what should I drink it? Reasonable suggestions welcomed...
27 replies
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Conservative Man (100 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
Does Gravity Exist?
I think it does, but this scientist does not. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/13/science/13gravity.html?no_interstitial
Nope. See, what we have instead is a theory I refer to as "intelligent falling".

Here's an article about it in a respected scientific journal of record...
http://www.theonion.com/articles/evangelical-scientists-refute-gravity-with-new-int,1778/
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
i didn't watch the video, but I resort to the good old gravitational constant between 2 bodies: 6.67 * 10^-11 Newton-m^2/kg^2
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
^per Isaac Newton
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
after reading the article, I've come to the conclusion that these people are way smarter than me. I forfeit my argument.
rlumley (0 DX)
14 Jul 10 UTC
Newton was wrong...
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
in what way?
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
I'm having a little difficulty w/ the main purports of the argument. Albeit I don't fully understand 'string' theory and thermodynamics, but how can it be argued that gravitational force is accidental?, especially when it is constant along the surface of the earth AND the moon. And- mind you- at a constant relation to the mass of the "considered" object?
exonian (158 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
@COTW: I think the argument is not that gravity manifests itself any differently than we have known since Newton- the constant you cite (and the laws it implies) still hold true. However, I think the argument is about the kind of way in which it comes about.

I'll use 2 examples to illustrate 2 types of manifestation:
1) Light (and the rest of the EM spectrum, if there are pedants around...). We have laws to describe it well (if you don't mind wave/particle duality), and it's a pretty fundamental phenomenon in that we are detecting waves/particles and that's just about that.
2) Floating. Yep, just everyday floating of a bit of something in water. We can describe this well, too. We have laws about it, and these let us predict what will happen with regard to floating if we change the shape or nature of the object or the thing in which it is floating.

So, both nice and predictable and proved. But I would certainly say you could claim that light is 'fundamental' in a way in which 'floating' is not: the latter appearing to arise purely from the relationship between the object, the liquid and the prevailing conditions (gravity etc, as it happens), whereas light seems to just need creating by a source (and then obviously is subject to being messed around with).

It is in this sense that I think the article is suggesting that gravity is a side-effect of something- not that it is bogus, or indeed probably not that it is the side-effect of anything directly observable by us (otherwise we'd have noticed by now!).
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
I understand your ARGUMENT and credit to IT the reasons why I discredit many astronomical calculations (which I do), namely those that exceed measurable limits.

However, the force of gravity is measurable as an acceleration due to a known force and velocity, and has been proven to satisfy the determined conditions through experimentation, regardless of perturbing phenomena. So the idea that gravitational force between two celestial objects would differ from that of any other argues the very principle of scientific universality. And, Iif I may also point out, that physical properties of electromagnetic waves do not at all conflict with Newtonian mechanics, which can easily describe the act of 'floating' as the surface area and mass of the floating object relative to density and force.
exonian (158 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
Of course both of my examples are readily described by Newtonian mechanics- that was the intention. My point was that one example (EM) is analogous to gravity being explained by something like a theory requiring gravitons, while the other (floating, in this case) has the phenomenon arising from other fundamental forces and phenomena and without any particles unique to it.

I am not certain I understand the first paragraph of your latest post, I'm afraid, so apologies that I am ignoring it :-)

The effects of gravity and the laws that govern it are indeed well established, and hold true on everything but a quantum level, but I don't see anything in this article that argues against that. Whence did you get the suggestion that this paper was proposing that different gravitational forces acted in different cases?

I think a fair analogy would be that of a discussion of whether sound is a fundamental phenomenon brought about by some sort of unique particle or whether it is in fact largely a peculiar manifestation of air pressure: either model could be constructed in such a way as to perfectly describe the behaviour of sound as observed, but clearly one must be right and the other wrong.

If anything, the argument against this theory would be (and this point is made in the article) that it doesn't change the laws of gravitation and thus no predictions can be made (and tested) based upon it; although one may argue that, in a case such as this, the approach is worth promoting in the hope of getting others to see gravity in a new way, which could then lead to bigger revelations.
diplomat61 (223 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
It works for me.
Miro Klose (595 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
another scientist stucked in his career and hungry for attention pulling some stuff out of his ass, this combined with fithgrader journalists makes - boring stuff...
Octavious (2701 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
String theory was developed primarily for the noble casue of keeping huge numbers of the more mathematically inclined research scientists in employment, despite the fact that nothing useful has ever come from it. As far as our understanding of gravity goes, people have always known stuff gets pulled down, Newton observed stuff attracts other stuff with a strangely weak force that works over surprisingly long distances, and ever since then people have been guessing why with limited success. Dr Verlinde is the latest in a long line of people to suggest something that might be true but probably isn't.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
14 Jul 10 UTC
its like the ancient history PhD professor who argues that the study of ancient history is fruitless. lol.


14 replies
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
10 Jul 10 UTC
The "Oh, Come On, It Wasn't THAT Bad," Screen and Stage Countdown
We've all seen it ...that disease known only as "fanboyitis" (or, since I suppose our diseases have to be politically correct nowadays, it's sister disease that's toally equal and in no way lesser than fanboyitis, fangirlitis.) A movie, play, book, or or show comes out- and it's great. The sequels come out- "Oh my God, those evil demons ruined EVERYTHING! EVERYTHING!!!" So sound off on The "Oh, Come On, It Wasn't THAT Bad" books, shows, films, and, yes, plays.
72 replies
Open
COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
New game- 8 hr phases
join Quickie 101- (if you are looking for fast gratification)
http://www.webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=33568
5 replies
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taylornottyler (100 D)
13 Jul 10 UTC
Fun Variant?
An Anon public press game
4 replies
Open
taylornottyler (100 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
Math, apparently not used on Web Dip
# Available points: 42 D
# Points in play: 50 D
# Total points: 102 D
WTF?
6 replies
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COTW (836 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
what was up w/ that lame -ass gunboat?
what was up w/ that lame -ass gunboat?
6 replies
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gopher27 (220 D)
14 Jul 10 UTC
Live game in 20 minutes
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=33559
11 replies
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2Oaks (0 DX)
14 Jul 10 UTC
WTA Gunboat 36 hr/phase
gameID=33418 50 D
Committed players please.
1 reply
Open
eaglesfan642 (0 DX)
14 Jul 10 UTC
new big pot world diplomacy
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=33542
0 replies
Open
Burgalveist (100 D)
13 Jul 10 UTC
Halp!, it won't let me in!
So I'm trying to join a game a friend of mine started up and it's password protected so just us pals can play together, but it won't let me join. If I type in the password and hit enter it just reloads the same screen, if I type it in and click on join it says I have the wrong password. HALP!
14 replies
Open
Jamiet99uk (808 D)
13 Jul 10 UTC
CD takeovers
It seems there is nothing to stop someone CD-ing in a game, and then returning to the game by taking over a DIFFERENT country which is in CD.
25 replies
Open
taylornottyler (100 D)
13 Jul 10 UTC
Question
About the retreat, if you make something retreat, can it retreat into a territory that was contested for (but bounced) by two other countries?
9 replies
Open
Sir Richard (100 D)
13 Jul 10 UTC
The Last of the Mohicans (WTA!)
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=33521
Join for a great 50 point Winner Takes All with Anonymous Players!
1 1/2 day phase lengths.
0 replies
Open
texasdeluxe (516 D(B))
08 Jun 10 UTC
The amazing continuing story thread!
Hi the spirit of threads that go on for ever, how about a continuing story thread where anyone who is so inclined adds a sentence to the story and we see where it takes us?
374 replies
Open
yebellz (729 D(G))
13 Jul 10 UTC
So what's the deal with AncMed?
Never played the Ancient Mediterranean variant before. Going to try to learn a bit about it in a low-stakes game.

gameID=33531
0 replies
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orathaic (1009 D(B))
07 Jul 10 UTC
Ignostic
define God:
109 replies
Open
Troodonte (3379 D)
12 Jul 10 UTC
Victory to Portugal! World cup Gunboat - finished
gameID=32157
Fell free to makes comments about this game
20 replies
Open
Jerkface (1626 D)
12 Jul 10 UTC
Is this a high stakes game?
I just made a game. Bet is 230 D. WTA. Is this considered high-stakes? Will it fill up? Please join!

http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=33468
4 replies
Open
TheGhostmaker (1545 D)
12 Jul 10 UTC
Help Russia on the Country Elimination Thread
A rare chance for Russia to actually win rather than be boringly mediocre in one of these things.

Do it for the country that straddles the stalemate lines!
8 replies
Open
Trustme1 (0 DX)
07 Jul 10 UTC
Best/Worst alliance
What do you think is the best and worst 2-way alliance on the board?
45 replies
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moses (124 D)
04 Jun 10 UTC
THE OFFICIAL SUPER AWESOME WORLD CUP (the real one) THREAD
Who's your team?
Who's gonna win?
How many goals is the US gonna beat England by?
LET THE BANTER BEGIN!
778 replies
Open
baumhaeuer (245 D)
06 Jul 10 UTC
baumhaeuer, draugnar,...
I made a partial list of Lutherans on this site, but it seems that I lost it. Any Lutherans interested in playing a ppsc, 2-day phase, classic map, normal rules game? Let me know and I'll make the game and pm you the password if enough people are interested.
46 replies
Open
Dosg (404 D)
12 Jul 10 UTC
Different colour stars
This is probably really obvious, but can someone tell me why some builds have a gold star next to them, and others a black star?

Thanks.
5 replies
Open
terry32smith (0 DX)
11 Jul 10 UTC
Looking for more maps to play on go to.....
http://olidip.net/index.php
3 replies
Open
terry32smith (0 DX)
12 Jul 10 UTC
New Map - The Fall of Capitalism: The Battle for America
http://olidip.net/board.php?gameID=1589
4 replies
Open
DJEcc24 (246 D)
07 Jun 10 UTC
Fantasy World Cup
i have created a group on yahoo for web diplomacy to see who predicts the world cup best. Pick every game and say the score. whoever is most accurate hails supreme. You in? Link to webdiplomacy group inside
67 replies
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Conservative Man (100 D)
26 Jun 10 UTC
20 Questions
I'm thinking of an object. You have 20 questions to guess what it is. Please put the number your question is in the question, or I won't answer it.
434 replies
Open
LJ TYLER DURDEN (334 D)
10 Jul 10 UTC
Join Some WTA Games
2 replies
Open
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