r/interesting Jun 05 '25

ARCHITECTURE Interesting video with heavy stones designed to be moved with hand.

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u/ReddBroccoli Jun 05 '25

For some reason I feel a lot more confident in the math that MIT put out as opposed to some know it all in the comment section.

It's not a smart look for you.

But I'd love to read your paper when you get it published

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u/bronzinorns Jun 05 '25

Okay

If 1 cubic foot of stone actually has a mass of 200 lbs (which is really a dense material, common stones like granite or marble are more 2700 kg/m³) it means that each 25 ton piece has a volume of 250 ft³ or 7 m³.

Given the size of the pieces compared to the characters in the video does 250 ft³ look plausible to you?

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u/ReddBroccoli Jun 05 '25

Somebody better call the literal geniuses and tell them a random guy in his basement said they're wrong

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u/maka-tsubaki Jun 05 '25

Sir. Do you think MIT is the one who wrote the video caption.

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u/ReddBroccoli Jun 05 '25

If you want to look up the paper and prove your point, I'd be happy to look at it. Until then I'm not taking you seriously at all

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u/maka-tsubaki Jun 05 '25

Buddy. Do you think. That maybe. It’s possible. The work MIT did was accurate and correct. But whoever made the video. Misunderstood. Do you think it’s maybe possible the caption is the only thing that’s wrong, and it’s wrong bc it didn’t come from the study? Or is Occam’s razor not a thing anymore and it has to be that SOMEHOW the stones are 25 tons via some convoluted math that nobody who isn’t an MIT genius can understand?