Umm, I think you actually agree with me.Cargando said:I realise that, it's just that I'm arguing against people calling it a planet just because it's more convenient.vivaldiscool said:Assassin Xaero said:Didn't scientist also say that there was going to be an ice age in the 70's and say that there is global warming now? And, shortly after they said Pluto wasn't a planet, they declared some big ball of gas in another solar system a planet...vivaldiscool said:If the scientists say it's not a planet, then it's not a planet. It's not like this is a subjective thing.As Good as it is to have a questioning mind, there comes a time when you have to realize that such things must be questioned for logical fallices, not what suites your fancy. This is quite obviously an entirely different case than the afformentioned examples. For one, This isn't an example of discovery or prediction, it's a simple matter of reclassification. Is it valuable? Yes. But it can't be "wrong" per-se since the only changed that faulty paremeters of what makes a planet, rather than what pluto was thought to be.kaziard said:they also said man cant fly, the victorians had discovered everything possible and the world is round (which it clearly isnt)vivaldiscool said:If the scientists say it's not a planet, then it's not a planet. It's not like this is a subjective thing.
just saying "the scientists" arnt always right![]()
For another. Do I really have to spell out how stupid it is to say "They could say it's wrong in the future, so I'm going to stick with what they know is wrong now."?
Am I? I haven't really been paying attention to what I've been typing...vivaldiscool said:Umm, I think you actually agree with me.Cargando said:I realise that, it's just that I'm arguing against people calling it a planet just because it's more convenient.vivaldiscool said:Assassin Xaero said:Didn't scientist also say that there was going to be an ice age in the 70's and say that there is global warming now? And, shortly after they said Pluto wasn't a planet, they declared some big ball of gas in another solar system a planet...vivaldiscool said:If the scientists say it's not a planet, then it's not a planet. It's not like this is a subjective thing.As Good as it is to have a questioning mind, there comes a time when you have to realize that such things must be questioned for logical fallices, not what suites your fancy. This is quite obviously an entirely different case than the afformentioned examples. For one, This isn't an example of discovery or prediction, it's a simple matter of reclassification. Is it valuable? Yes. But it can't be "wrong" per-se since the only changed that faulty paremeters of what makes a planet, rather than what pluto was thought to be.kaziard said:they also said man cant fly, the victorians had discovered everything possible and the world is round (which it clearly isnt)vivaldiscool said:If the scientists say it's not a planet, then it's not a planet. It's not like this is a subjective thing.
just saying "the scientists" arnt always right![]()
For another. Do I really have to spell out how stupid it is to say "They could say it's wrong in the future, so I'm going to stick with what they know is wrong now."?
Then you are nothing buy a pawn in a fascist state!wilted_orchid said:I just did my GCSEs and they actually had to write on the Physics paper, "Consider Pluto a planet," so I'm just doing what AQA told me when I say yes.
exactly why do people feel emotionally connected to the idea that pluto's a planet. It's still there it can still be youre favorite, if you have a favorite planet. But it's still there dont worry about itvivaldiscool said:If the scientists say it's not a planet, then it's not a planet. It's not like this is a subjective thing.
vivaldiscool said:Okay, what about the other 8,000 "giant" land masses orbiting our sun that are at times capable of having atmosphere? Aren't those planets? Pluto isn't a planet it's just a big hunk of rock and ice. It's less that a fifth the size of our own moon. Again, this isn't subjective.KSarty said:I think in opposite of this statement. It is a giant land mass orbiting our sun that is capable at times of having its own atmosphere. That says planet to me, regardless of what scientists say. And seriously, these scientists have nothing better to do than debate whether or not Pluto should be categorized as a planet when we still can't get past our own moon?vivaldiscool said:If the scientists say it's not a planet, then it's not a planet. It's not like this is a subjective thing.
Also, nice red herring, but how astronomers spend their time (which I'm actually pretty sure you know nothing about) really as nothing to do with this argument.
It was called a planet since when it was identified, it was a "large" body orbiting the Sun. Only later did more information become available, such as Pluto being a fairly insignificant rock orbiting with a great many other insignificant rocks, some larger and some smaller.magicmonkeybars said:So I have to ask, why was it a planet to begin with if so many more simmilar rocks were floating out there too, why was it so much more special then all the other giant rocks ?