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We know it fell because it says so in the f**king riddle.
This isn't about whether we knew it fell. The fact that it fell is a premise of the entire problem.Are people even reading my post.Sound isn't vibration. Sound is sensation!
For all we know, there are strange and surreal things happening directly behind us, and the act of observing makes these things go away. We can't know for sure. That what makes these discussions so fun.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfPeprQ7oGc
Quote from: N. Escalona on March 24, 2009, 05:20:43 pmThis isn't about whether we knew it fell. The fact that it fell is a premise of the entire problem.Are people even reading my post.Sound isn't vibration. Sound is sensation!The definition is vibration in medium at a audible range. The key word is audible, not heard.Doesn't matter if anyone is there to hear it.If the tree fell with 100db then it's a sound, regardless whether people around are not.
But you made that definition up!
No it does not make a sound because nothing is there to hear it. How can you base a prediction or observation on which you don't know where as there is no evidence to support it. Although if you were actually there in that period of time it will defeat the purpose which also includes using technology. To summarize this proposition, the tree falls in the forest...nobody is there to hear it...how does it make a sound? You don't know do you, so technically it does not make a sound. For all of you who think so...think otherwise.
I attend grammar school, last grade, and ignorance is all around me. Well, good for them. Ignorance is bliss.
Good point Frunkamuch, and correct one too, the riddle itself states that the tree fell, and falling usually makes sound right? so the question is, what did it fall on? bags of cotton? rocks? that's what you should be thinking, you don't always have to make every single question complex like the goddamn proton accelerator ;/
Quote from: demoniac93 on March 26, 2009, 07:44:23 amGood point Frunkamuch, and correct one too, the riddle itself states that the tree fell, and falling usually makes sound right? so the question is, what did it fall on? bags of cotton? rocks? that's what you should be thinking, you don't always have to make every single question complex like the goddamn proton accelerator ;/No, because the point of the original riddle is to point to the potential inconsistencies of empirical evidence.