Ghost:
Please read my post on "arminess" above, first.
I am saying the ball has a specific amount of stuff we call mass.
You can call the stuff "mass" if you like, but that only muddies the waters. The mass is really a number you assign to designate just how much much "stuff" you have. Pretending that mass is the same as "stuff" is a category error. Ideas/concepts are not "stuff".
Just like you can claim the ball is matter, I claim the ball is mass.
I already walked you through what calling an object "a mass" means. The fault is in your imprecise use of language, that's all.
I can even measure the mass, where you appear to not be able to measure the matter.
Measuring something means putting a number on it, doesn't it?
I can quantify my claim that the ball has mass by measuring how much mass it has.
What you're really doing is determining how much "stuff" is in the ball, then giving that a number, which you call its mass.
Can you measure the matter that you claim the ball has?
I'm not sure what you mean. A measurement needs a unit of measure. "Stuff" doesn't come with units of measure built in.
Objects have mass, like they have volume. Objects have different densities, which is mass per volume. Are you claiming that an object doesn't have a density, or volume? Are you now claiming that density is a fairytale, that a balloon is the same as a bowling ball? mass per volume is what objects are. A ball is an object comprised of mass and volume.
Well, no. A ball is made of atoms, stuff. It isn't made of mass and it certainly isn't made of volume.
Can you show me a bottle full of volume? Can you buy me a cup of mass?
That number is the number you assign to the ball because it has the same mass as another object that you have standardized as that number for the same mass. There is a difference between an object having mass and measuring an object's mass. I am claiming you are actually measuring mass and then saying there is no mass, just a number. That's like saying you measured the length of a stick to be 1 meter, but length is just a number. Sticks have length, some short and some long. No numbers required, just place them side by side and find out which is longer and which is shorter.
Sticks also have arminess, as you know. It happens to be zero Jarms. You can measure it.
Placing two things side by side, by the way, is a kind of measurement. Just a relative one. We can place two objects side by side and compare their arminess, too.
Are you going to claim that arminess is a fairytale and that a tennis ball is the same as a dog? Arminess is what objects are! Objects are comprised of arminess! Or aren't they?
Trees have mass too. The problem is you claiming that a tree doesn't have mass, and then claiming you can measure the tree's mass. Outrageous!
I've been very clear. When I say a tree "has mass", you can
always take that to mean that there's a number I can assign to the tree that I like to call its mass.
So yes, the tree has mass. Its mass is a number. But its mass is not in the tree. It is in my head, or on a piece of paper, or in a computer, or wherever.
Some sticks are longer than other sticks. It has more length. You can measure the sticks and assign numbers to the lengths, but that is just measuring, and does not mean that sticks don't have length, that length is just a number. Outrageous!
You can measure the arminess of a stick and assign a number to that. So, by your argument, arminess isn't just a number. It's an inherent feature that sticks have. Right?
Who cares if you look or not, a stick has a length by the pure fact that it is a 3 dimensional object in space. If it exists it exists with 3 dimensions, x, y, and z!
How do you know there's even a stick if you don't look at it? (If a tree falls in the forest...)
Sticks have length, period.
Yes, and an arminess!
But sticks have length, with or without a measuring system. If humans never existed on Earth, trees would still have sticks that have length, extending out. Fact! No numbers required!
Would trees still have arminess, too, if humans never existed? They'd still have their little sticky arms sticking out, right? No numbers required?
Mass is directly proportional to inertia, so when I throw a more massive ball I can feel a difference vs a less massive ball. I can throw a less massive ball faster. More mass means more inertia, which means more resistance to acceleration.
Mass is a measure of inertia, or resistance to acceleration. It isn't the
cause of inertia. How could a number cause something like inertia?
That's like saying that the reason I have two arms is because my arminess is 2 Jarms.
The ball does not push your hand, YOU push the ball.
Please google Newton's third law of motion. Get back to me when you've done that.
You are confusing measuring with actual objects. Objects have mass, and yes you can measure the mass and assign a number of units to that mass. Assigning a number to an object's mass doesn't take away from the fact that the object has mass to begin with. It's what you measured, duh?
The statement "objects have mass" is equivalent to "There is a number, called the mass, that can be associated with an object."
When we "measure the mass", we're doing something that will allow us to assign an objective, repeatable, numerical value to the number called "mass" for that object.
By your argument, assigning a number to arminess doesn't take away from the fact that the object has arminess to begin with. But does it, really?
More people does not equate to greater mass. I could put 3 small children in a car and do just fine, compared to one 400 lb dude that make my car a dog! More MASS is what kills acceleration, not necessarily more people.
More
matter is what kills acceleration, not more mass. How could a number affect acceleration?
You are in Write4U territory! LOL Mixing up numbers and reality.
The nervous LOL is back. Ho hum.