Hey, A few things...
He can speak for himself but, knowing Andrew, probably all of the above. He does a "mix 'n' match" and sometimes states things, though certainly not out of stupidity, in a foolish manner. However, it can give him a little more versatility as things 'unfold'.I'm not sure if you're joking or not, because most of those would be perfect examples of "fallacies of argument" for my English class. Like I said, I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic so I won't jump on it-yet.
A 180-pound man falls to gravity -- so does a 6-pound baby. Would you expect it to fall up (thought some of those old late-night b/w space shows, with their upward-curving rocketship flames, were rather humorousi can't remember the name, but one of the astronauts obviously had severe problems keeping on his feet... ...it seemed to me he fell pretty much "earthlike", not what you'd expect of falling in 1/6 G.
A 180-pound man falls to gravity -- so does a 6-pound baby. Would you expect it to fall up (thought some of those old late-night b/w space shows, with their upward-curving rocketship flames, were rather humorous)?
I saw the Apollo 18 LEM (the program was cancelled before its launch) at the Cradle of Aviation museum in new york and I must say, that thing looks like it was definately made to go to the moon, not sit in a studio in the middle of a desert somewhere and be filmed.
The way I see it the only thing that could have been faked was that first Moon landing & the moon walk itself.
Which as I've been saying is the only bit that would have to be faked.
Indeed Woody. It's a shame that everyone can't see that simple fact.
Doug ........... I think it's an age thing.
There's too many variables involved at the start of an 'accelerated' fall. His suit increases his weight but, even though his body can feel this bulkie mass engulfing it, his muscles are made to overcome resistive "Earth" forces, thus he may overcompensate. Initially, he could fall even faster.the gravity accelaration on the moon should be 1/6 of that on earth. yet it looked to me like he fell just as fast as someone on earth.
There's too many variables involved at the start of an 'accelerated' fall. His suit increases his weight but, even though his body can feel this bulkie mass engulfing it, his muscles are made to overcome resistive "Earth" forces, thus he may overcompensate. Initially, he could fall even faster.
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