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On Thu, 25 Sep 2003 01:16:33 GMT, Dave Shrader
wrote: Gene Nygaard wrote: [SNIP] Apparently you are claiming that pounds are not units of mass. Where did you learn that? Well, I learned that a Pound is a unit of Force. Well, I learned that a Slug [pound mass] is Pound*acceleration. Well, I learned that mass is pound*sec^2/foot. Where did I learn this? What's my source? Physics 101, University Physics, Sears and Zemansky, Addison-Wesley Publishing, 1956, Chapter 6, page 94. I hope tou don't need another reference? Now, what's your real problem? What are you trying to say? Can you quote it to me, specifically where it says that pounds are not units of mass? I'll bet you just misunderstood what it said. I have the 1970 edition of Sears and Zemansky myself, so I'm betting that if anything, what it actually says is clearer in that older edition than it is in the 1970 edition. Pounds force do exist, of course. What I'm asking you to show me is not that, but rather that pounds are not units of mass. Sears and Zemansky didn't lie about this in 1956. They might have been dishonest and deceptive about it, not concerned enough about the possibility that fools like you would misinterpret what they said or actually encouraging such misinterpretation. But they didn't lie about it. Some textbooks today might actually lie about it (or, alternatively, their authors are too poorly educated to know any better--take your choice). Gene Nygaard Dave, W1MCE Being the skeptic that I am, how can I convince myself that that is true? Is there some textbook, or something from some national standards agency, that would help me verify this? Gene Nygaard Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
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