Have you heard that Aristotle and Galileo are having a discourse about their beliefs about motion?
Yes I did. I'd seen them arguing earlier.
EARLIER...
ARISTOTLE
EARLIER.....
I told you, Galileo, that heavy things fall much faster than light things.
Listen, I'll explain.
What are they doing?
No, you're mistaken. This is due to gravity, heavy and light things would fall at the same time.
GALILEO
"It takes a force to move an object in an unnatural way," or, to put it another way, "motion necessitates force." After all, if you push a book, it moves. When you stop pushing, the book stops moving.
For example, this crample paper and this book.
The heavier ones are much faster to fall than the light ones because it is in the nature of falling that the heavy objects seek their natural place faster than the light ones.
I argue that there is only one principle of motion—heaviness. Bodies move upward not because they have a natural lightness, but because they are displaced or extruded by other heavier bodies moving downward.
For example, a ball rolling or sliding down a hill without friction would reach the same height on the opposite hill.
THE OBJECTS FALLS AT THE SAME RATE BECAUSE IN THE ABSENCE OF AIR RESISTANCE, GRAVITY CAUSES THE OBJECT TO FALL AT THE SAME RATE
They are complicated.
They sure are. HAHAHAHA
The Battle of Geniuses.
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