Post by Joshua Alvarez on Apr 12, 2016 20:18:54 GMT
In this thread, anyone can post their own hypotheses or someone else's hypotheses (given that the original inspiration/author is given credit). Hypotheses must be about what might be happening in the concave earth. You must follow the following format for proposed hypotheses.
Abstract
This is a 100-200 word explanation of the hypothesis and what challenge/problem it seeks to answer. It must also contain a short summary of what possible experiment could refute it.
Introduction
This is a clear and detailed explanation of the challenge/problem you are dealing with in your submission concerning phenomena in the Concave Earth.
Hypothesis
This is a clear and detailed concept that you believe explains the phenomena you described in the Introduction. It must be consistent and be mathematically thought out (i.e. it must have an equation or equations that purport to show a connection between your explanation and phenomena).
Possible Refutation
As Popper's Sword dictates, "What cannot be refuted by experiment cannot be called science." This section must contain a possible experiment that would conclusively refute your hypothesis. This way, it can be tested with this sword later on in the submission process designed to weed out bad ideas.
Summary
This is a short and sweet summary for the layperson about your hypothesis and possible experiments to test it with. This way, laypeople can do their own testing (if they can afford the tools and materials).
In addition, every submission must be checked beforehand for spelling and punctuation errors.
There are a few rules and restrictions which you must follow. Otherwise, you risk your post being deleted regardless of the scientific merit it may have.
Rules And Restrictions
1. No cursing. This includes any filth words commonly replaced by the following symbols: !@#$%&*
2. No personal attacks. This includes attacking anyone here as a shill, fraud, liar, stupid, etc. If you have concerns regarding the reliability of anyone, please PM me about it.
3. No pornagraphic material.
4. No scams.
5. Use abbreviations for measurements (e.g. km, cm, m) in the Abstract, Introduction, Hypothesis, and Possible Refutation sections. Use full names (e.g. kilometers, centimeters, meters) in the Summary section.
Abstract
This is a 100-200 word explanation of the hypothesis and what challenge/problem it seeks to answer. It must also contain a short summary of what possible experiment could refute it.
Introduction
This is a clear and detailed explanation of the challenge/problem you are dealing with in your submission concerning phenomena in the Concave Earth.
Hypothesis
This is a clear and detailed concept that you believe explains the phenomena you described in the Introduction. It must be consistent and be mathematically thought out (i.e. it must have an equation or equations that purport to show a connection between your explanation and phenomena).
Possible Refutation
As Popper's Sword dictates, "What cannot be refuted by experiment cannot be called science." This section must contain a possible experiment that would conclusively refute your hypothesis. This way, it can be tested with this sword later on in the submission process designed to weed out bad ideas.
Summary
This is a short and sweet summary for the layperson about your hypothesis and possible experiments to test it with. This way, laypeople can do their own testing (if they can afford the tools and materials).
In addition, every submission must be checked beforehand for spelling and punctuation errors.
There are a few rules and restrictions which you must follow. Otherwise, you risk your post being deleted regardless of the scientific merit it may have.
Rules And Restrictions
1. No cursing. This includes any filth words commonly replaced by the following symbols: !@#$%&*
2. No personal attacks. This includes attacking anyone here as a shill, fraud, liar, stupid, etc. If you have concerns regarding the reliability of anyone, please PM me about it.
3. No pornagraphic material.
4. No scams.
5. Use abbreviations for measurements (e.g. km, cm, m) in the Abstract, Introduction, Hypothesis, and Possible Refutation sections. Use full names (e.g. kilometers, centimeters, meters) in the Summary section.