Strictly speaking, no mass itself has any weight. What mass has is mass.such that the largest mass in the universe has no weight. — Gregory
Matter does not determine anything, metaphysically or any other way. Enough confusion here to unwind the rest.if you were this matter you would have no way metaphysically to determine your metaphysical size because you have no size. — Gregory
A good place to start with the distinction between mass and weight, staying with it until you have it "in your bones."I am simply trying to understand this better. — Gregory
If I am understanding Newton correctly, smaller objects gain their weight from larger ones, such that the largest mass in the universe has no weight. — Gregory
The largest mass in the universe gains weight from all the rest of the mass of the universe. — fishfry
We can't imagine every action causing an equal immediate reaction in the opposite direction though because things wouldn't move in that case. — Gregory
Newton perfectly well explained the motions of the planets in the solar system using equal and opposite reactions as one of his physical principles. — fishfry
the series has to be either eternal or it came out of nothing. — Gregory
If you run the known motion of the matter in the universe backward, you get the big bang. That was the initial oomph. And what caused the big bang, and what came before it, and do we know it's even true? Nobody knows but everyone has an opinion. Lawrence Krauss says that In the Beginning was the quantum soup and the laws of physics. Genesis says that In the Beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Can anyone clearly distinguish science from theology here? Of course the simulationists say that In the Beginning was the great computer in the sky, and we're all programs. I'm Microsoft Word, and you're Tetris. Science? Or theology? The Many Worlds folks insist that while in this universe I wrote this paragraph, in some other universe I thought better of it and didn't. Science? Or theology? And why is it exactly that so much of our science lately is indistinguishable from theology? — fishfry
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