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An undetectable aether? Your understanding of my question is off.
I don't really care about studying the history of these things, or what they've grown into. It offends me.
I hate that intelligent people are collected from birth to keep this crap wheel institution togather!?!
Highly offensive IMO and does evil unto man's heart.
Go offend someone else with your 'empirical' knowledge on these subjects.
Don't waste my time anymore please and thank you.
Does a magnetic field extend from the electric shell of the atom? any thoughts?
Okay then would you agree that the electric shell is hot?
and the magnetic field a tapering of this heat?
I guess absolute zero is the pure temperature of the aether
Electric shells repel when they touch because electricity is made of heat and heat conducts in one direction, towards equilibrium. So the two electric shells repel because of heat's quality of conducting. When a larger atom like oxygen bonds with a smaller atom like hydrogen, the hydrogen has a weaker electric shell and the retraction of the magnetic field back into the shell from the gravity of the molecular bond would be stronger for the smaller atom's in the bond.
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 13/07/2023 21:18:29Electric shells repel when they touch because electricity is made of heat and heat conducts in one direction, towards equilibrium. So the two electric shells repel because of heat's quality of conducting. When a larger atom like oxygen bonds with a smaller atom like hydrogen, the hydrogen has a weaker electric shell and the retraction of the magnetic field back into the shell from the gravity of the molecular bond would be stronger for the smaller atom's in the bond. No.That doesn't make sense either.
what?: repulsion, the other thing
Quote from: Bored chemist on 13/07/2023 21:22:20Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 13/07/2023 21:18:29Electric shells repel when they touch because electricity is made of heat and heat conducts in one direction, towards equilibrium. So the two electric shells repel because of heat's quality of conducting. When a larger atom like oxygen bonds with a smaller atom like hydrogen, the hydrogen has a weaker electric shell and the retraction of the magnetic field back into the shell from the gravity of the molecular bond would be stronger for the smaller atom's in the bond. No.That doesn't make sense either.what?: repulsion, the other thing
I think trevorjohnson is ChatGPT, thinly disguised.