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- GunClap
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I never knew you had such a penchant for daisies...dax wrote:So Daisy's are naturally symetrical? Sometimes you can have an odd amount of petals?
What if the gravitational force is stronger in a particualr growing area, do they still have the same outcome as, let's say, one grown on the moon?
Dax

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Actually, I think the bigger question, Dax, is whether or not the daisy's own gravitational force, as a result of its own mass, however infinitely minute, and acting upon itself, is stronger than the gravitational force of the earth, in general, acting locally upon the daisy, influencing the symmetry of the daisy as demonstrated, or not, by the number of petals. Ditto the moon.dax wrote:So Daisy's are naturally symetrical? Sometimes you can have an odd amount of petals?
What if the gravitational force is stronger in a particualr growing area, do they still have the same outcome as, let's say, one grown on the moon?
Dax
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- GunClap
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You have to take into account that although the gravitational force of the Earth acting in localization to the daisy with it's own independent gravitational field is superseded by the biological construct of the daisy in as of itself with the DNA programmed with the natural instinctive instruction to place one cell in the opposite position to the stronger gravitational field of the Earth that, with passage of time, would finally break through the Earth's epidermis and would then find that effect, as Dax suggested with the passage of radiation through the atmosphere, striking the biological structure of which we spoke then further guiding it's growth by an different pre-programmed instinctive inclination to grow again, in the opposite direction of the strong gravitational force of whence it first was inclined...HughJorgan wrote:Actually, I think the bigger question, Dax, is whether or not the daisy's own gravitational force, as a result of its own mass, however infinitely minute, and acting upon itself, is stronger than the gravitational force of the earth, in general, acting locally upon the daisy, influencing the symmetry of the daisy as demonstrated, or not, by the number of petals. Ditto the moon.dax wrote:So Daisy's are naturally symetrical? Sometimes you can have an odd amount of petals?
What if the gravitational force is stronger in a particualr growing area, do they still have the same outcome as, let's say, one grown on the moon?
Dax
Last edited by GunClap on Wed Aug 19, 2009 9:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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