Not it's not the same thing.
Originally I stated (by mistake) that two objects of dissimilar mass would fall at the same rate if gravity was a force. But in fact if gravity was a force then the lower mass would fall slower.
Acceleration of a kg when imparted with a constant force is less than the acceleration of a tonne when imparted by the same force. So bigger objects would fall faster. But as gravity is an acceleration (caused by, we believe, the warping of spacetime by the presence of masses) the bodies actually fall at the same rate, and feel a different force. As the force is different in the same gravitation conditions then gravity must be an acceleration and not a force.
I just got muddled somehow in the first post prior to my :doh:.
B2B - the egg, and I know a joke to prove it
But just because you can find one thing from something doesn't make that something the same as the other. Just because you can easily find the force acting on a body due to gravity doesn't make gravity a force.
Gravity is a constant right? It's the same all over the surface of the earth, so constant in that regard, not constant universally. So if gravity was a force, then every object would feel the same force no matter what it's mass is. But it isn't a force, it's an acceleration, and thus different masses 'feel' a different force.
Edit again: I know that gravity can be considered a 'force per unit weight', which is the same thing as an acceleration just written differently. Like speed can be written as 'change in distance per unit time'. That doesn't make speed a distance or a time, just like gravity isn't a force or a mass.
Obviously our understands are, in effect, the same, but George is completely missing the point we were trying to make, and totally fails to see why explaination. Not because he's wrong, but because he's been taught differently I suppose. We all know how bodies react to gravity, and how the forces resolve from gravities attraction, but still I maintain that does not make gravity a force but an acceleration. When you express gravity you write x m/s/s. Never ever do you write x N, because that's not valid.
Btw, I've given up writing millions of posts, so I am just going to edit this one. If you don't see it and think I've run away then you're mistaken. And at the end of day I maintain that the force dynamics seat could, if it could tip you up vertically, provide you with the sensation of 1G acceleration longitudinally, or laterally if it was tipped 90 degrees to the side. Greater accelerations can only occur through the movement of the rig throughout it's range, so a peak of 4 or 5G might be possible for a fraction of time, with 1G sustained in any direction.
And even then the force acting on your back as you accelerate is wrong, because the seat moves away from you rather than presses into you, but it's sufficient to trick you into believing.