Redrang604 Posted December 23, 2004 Posted December 23, 2004 ok, in fact gold weighs less pound for pound and heres why, gold is not weighed on the same system as feathers, gold is weighed on the troy scale and there are 12 ounces to a pound in the troy scale. Feathers, and just about everything else is weghed on the avdupois(sp?) system in which there are 16 ounces, the ounces in each are the same, but the pounds are not.Thus pound for pound, feathers weigh more than gold
Callipygous Posted December 24, 2004 Posted December 24, 2004 ok, in fact gold weighs less pound for pound and heres why, gold is not weighed on the same system as feathers, gold is weighed on the troy scale and there are 12 ounces to a pound in the troy scale. Feathers, and just about everything else is weghed on the avdupois(sp?) system in which there are 16 ounces, the ounces in each are the same, but the pounds are not.Thus pound for pound, feathers weigh more than gold wow... thats really really stupid. not you, the fact that a pound ever means anything different. is it really that hard to standardize things?
Redrang604 Posted December 24, 2004 Posted December 24, 2004 TroyA system historically used for measuring the weight of drugs, precious metals and gemstones. The name comes from the French city of Troyes. 480 grains = 1 ounce troy 31.1035 grams = 1 ounce troy 12 troy ounces = 1 troy pound 20 pennyweights (dwt) = 1 ounce troy 1 pound = 373.242 grams 1 pound = 5760 grains I guess it's tradition
SubJunk Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 I thought of another: antimatter. But if you had antimatter inside a barrel you would need a lot of heavy confining equipment to stop it touching the matter of the barrel so it wouldn't actually become lighter, it would become heavier
SubJunk Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 Whats wrong with this paradox: An arrow in flight is really at rest. For at every point in its flight' date=' the arrow must occupy a length of space exactly equal to its own length. After all, it cannot occupy a greater length, nor a lesser one. But the arrow cannot move within this length it occupies. It would need extra space in which to move, and it of course has none. So at every point in its flight, the arrow is at rest. And if it is at rest at every moment in its flight, then it follows that it is at rest during the entire flight.[/quote'] But the faster an object travels the shorter in length it becomes so in fact it doesn't always occupy the same length of space. I know that's not the answer but oh well
SubJunk Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 Mwahaha I have returned to be a pain in the ass by being overly rational!
Daecon Posted February 7, 2006 Posted February 7, 2006 Um... which riddle is the one we're supposed to answer? I like riddles.
dcstegg228 Posted March 23, 2006 Posted March 23, 2006 ok i've got one' date=' You've probably all heard it before, but anyway: A man is walking in the desert, he is captured by some local tribesmen. They take him to their king. The king says to the man: "you have a chance to say one sentence, it has to be true or false. If you say a true sentence I will kill you quickly,If you say a false sentence, I will kill you slowly." The man says one sentence, and the cheif has to let him go. Now I've heard many plausible answers to this riddle, all correct, and because of that I'm only going to accept the one I'm thinking of HEHEHE have fun with that one if you dont already know it!!![/quote'] you will kill me slowly
5614 Posted March 23, 2006 Posted March 23, 2006 Whats wrong with this paradox: An arrow in flight is really at rest. For at every point in its flight' date=' the arrow must occupy a length of space exactly equal to its own length. After all, it cannot occupy a greater length, nor a lesser one. But the arrow cannot move within this length it occupies. It would need extra space in which to move, and it of course has none. So at every point in its flight, the arrow is at rest. And if it is at rest at every moment in its flight, then it follows that it is at rest during the entire flight.[/quote'] You are analyzing the situation in the wrong way because you are seperating position and velocity into seperate properties when really you should be using a single unified description of the arrow. You need to use calculus which describes not only the position of the arrow at any moment, but also the way in which the position is changing.
reyam200 Posted April 18, 2006 Posted April 18, 2006 "The man who invented it doesn't want it. The man who bought it doesn't need it. The man who needs it doesn't know it. What is it?" here is a riddle, its easy if you ask me.
ecoli Posted April 18, 2006 Posted April 18, 2006 "The man who invented it doesn't want it. The man who bought it doesn't need it. The man who needs it doesn't know it. What is it?" here is a riddle' date=' its easy if you ask me.[/quote'] a coffin, or a gravestone. either one fits.
Apeofman Posted April 22, 2006 Posted April 22, 2006 ok i've got one' date=' You've probably all heard it before, but anyway: A man is walking in the desert, he is captured by some local tribesmen. They take him to their king. The king says to the man: "you have a chance to say one sentence, it has to be true or false. If you say a true sentence I will kill you quickly,If you say a false sentence, I will kill you slowly." The man says one sentence, and the cheif has to let him go. Now I've heard many plausible answers to this riddle, all correct, and because of that I'm only going to accept the one I'm thinking of HEHEHE have fun with that one if you dont already know it!!![/quote'] How about ... Sire, it is my destiny that I will die in the same moment as a great King is struck down dead. The king can only know the truth of the sentence by killing the man. If the man is telling the truth, that is the certain end of the king. The king will prefer to wait and see.
chemfreak Posted June 5, 2006 Posted June 5, 2006 he does use the table and saw he took the table and cut it in half. to halves make a whole and he gets out. another version goes(there is a mirror but no saw) you look in the mirror see what you saw take the saw and cut the table in half to halves make a whole and you jump out the whole.
Pseudoswallo Posted July 16, 2006 Posted July 16, 2006 According to Einstien, the all observes have the right to consider themselves at rest, thus there is no paraadox in the arrow question. Other than that, the 5th sentance is just BS. sorry about spelling, crudeness, and whatever, but I'm in a rush
gohanick Posted August 11, 2006 Posted August 11, 2006 heres a stupid riddle I made up myself - lets see if you can get it : -P How can something be above something, but at the same time, be below it? (Hint: the entire object is above and below another entire object, they dont overlap)
FriedChicken Posted September 8, 2006 Posted September 8, 2006 There's an old clock tower with an automated bell that chimes according to the time. e.g. at 4 oclock it will chime 4 times.At 6 o'clock' date=' it chimes 6 times, starting 30 seconds before 6 o'clock, the last chime happens at 6 o'clock. When will the bell start chiming for 12 o'clock? p.s. When i first read this riddle, I got it almost straight away, but no one I've given it to has got the right answer 'till I've told them. From a psychological view-point it's very interesting as it indicates the thought processes of the person working it out as opposed to other brainteasers that test your intelligence. My theory is that if you spend 5 minutes working it out and don't get it, you never will even if you're the smartest person in the world, that's the hypothesis anyway [/quote'] This is what popped into my head as soon as I read this. It starts at 11:59, 5 seconds per chime adds up to 60 seconds.
ParanoiA Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 My dad made this up (or he at least believes he did), so I'm curious if you all think it's any good... Which way are you going if the faster you run, the slower you go?
ParanoiA Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 There's an old clock tower with an automated bell that chimes according to the time. e.g. at 4 oclock it will chime 4 times.At 6 o'clock, it chimes 6 times, starting 30 seconds before 6 o'clock, the last chime happens at 6 o'clock. When will the bell start chiming for 12 o'clock? p.s. When i first read this riddle, I got it almost straight away, but no one I've given it to has got the right answer 'till I've told them. From a psychological view-point it's very interesting as it indicates the thought processes of the person working it out as opposed to other brainteasers that test your intelligence. My theory is that if you spend 5 minutes working it out and don't get it, you never will even if you're the smartest person in the world, that's the hypothesis anyway No it's 6 seconds per chime. The last chime strikes at 6 o'clock. If you think about it: 5:59:30 5:59:36 5:59:42 5:59:48 5:59:54 6:00:00 So, for 12:00 it works out to 11:58:54
ParanoiA Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 ok i've got one' date=' You've probably all heard it before, but anyway: A man is walking in the desert, he is captured by some local tribesmen. They take him to their king. The king says to the man: "you have a chance to say one sentence, it has to be true or false. If you say a true sentence I will kill you quickly,If you say a false sentence, I will kill you slowly." The man says one sentence, and the cheif has to let him go. Now I've heard many plausible answers to this riddle, all correct, and because of that I'm only going to accept the one I'm thinking of HEHEHE have fun with that one if you dont already know it!!![/quote'] Does he just say that the king is going to die at 100? Or something to that effect?
Callipygous Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 My dad made this up (or he at least believes he did)' date=' so I'm curious if you all think it's any good... Which way are you going if the faster you run, the slower you go?[/quote'] east?
ParanoiA Posted September 9, 2006 Posted September 9, 2006 east? You're definitely on the right track. If you were standing still you'd be traveling faster than going this direction, which isn't east but rather...
Callipygous Posted September 10, 2006 Posted September 10, 2006 You're definitely on the right track. If you were standing still you'd be traveling faster than going this direction, which isn't east but rather... west. (can i cash in my weekly brainfart on this one?)
ParanoiA Posted September 10, 2006 Posted September 10, 2006 west. (can i cash in my weekly brainfart on this one?) Right on dude...and hey, you had me re-thinking it to be sure I was right. The irony is, I'm horrible with directions and am notorious for losing track of north, south, east and west.
anti-enemy Posted January 13, 2007 Posted January 13, 2007 Hey I've got one; it might seem easy though.. Imagine there was a duck stuck in a transparent box, The box has no opening everything is closed from each side, how are you able to take the duck out of the box..? I dare someone here figures out the answer! btw I'm new here! and this is my first post
codydudetm Posted May 22, 2009 Posted May 22, 2009 Three people walk into a resturant, they order their food. One of them orders catfish. When the food came the man took a bite of his catfish, excused himself, went to the bathroom, and killed himself. why did he kill himself?
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