[geocentrism] Re: Tides - Revisited

  • From: "philip madsen" <pma15027@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 29 Jul 2007 07:13:45 +1000

Thats an easy one Neville..  first up If I hang two weights from a scaffold, 
they will tend towards each other. Thats gravity. If there was any loose water 
on one of the weights , lets say the left hand weight, being loose it would 
tend to flow to the side of the ball facing the other ball. This is gravity 
newton wise, or it is squeezed there by aether pressure Brush wise..  

I prefer to discuss it from Mr Brush's perspective. No doubt Paul will oblige 
with Newton..  the result is the same..

Between the two celestial bodies, an aether shadow is cast, each causing a 
shadow on each other which lessens the aether pressure on each body  on the 
side that is in this shadow. Thus any loose material like water or air will be 
squeezed into the shadow area..  This is a tide. 

It is important to realise that there is still some pressure of gravity on 
those areas of the globes, within the shadow. Things on earth still fall and 
have weight, albiet slightly less weight..  Ditto for things on the moon..  And 
consequently there must still be a point between the moon and the earth where 
the pressure forces on each side are equal, and the body will not fall either 
way...

The force mechanics of this can easily be demonstrated with two magnets 
adjacent attracting to each other.  Any iron loose in the space between them 
will fly either to one or the other. .  but there will be one neutral spot 
between them where the Iron will not fall either way.  Further if one magnet 
was replaced with a rubber ball and coated with a magnetic fluid, you will see 
how a tide will form..  

Philip..  


----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Neville Jones 
  To: geocentrism@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Sunday, July 29, 2007 2:00 AM
  Subject: [geocentrism] Tides - Revisited


  All,

  It is widely accepted, although not by me, that the Moon causes the tides. It 
is also widely accepted, although not by me, that there exists a zero-gravity 
point situated somewhere between the World and Moon.

  My question is this: If the ocean were situated at the zero-gravity point, 
then there would be no tide. Closer to the World the pull of the World is 
stronger. Closer to the Moon the pull of the Moon is stronger. The net effect 
this side of the zero-gravity point is always a positive pull by the World. 
Since this is equivalent to a force of gravity that produces a stronger pull as 
we take the oceans further this side of the zero-gravity point, then how does 
the Moon produce the tides?

  Neville.

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