I think I've seen the first part of this a long time ago but the second part is 
new to me

jenny barron

Scotland UK



Antigravity, The Feline Butterology Theory

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Captured from the Usenet Oracle, 19930625

This question was posed to the Usenet Oracle:

If you drop a buttered piece of bread, it will fall on the floor butter-side 
down. If a cat is dropped from a window or other high and towering place, it 
will land on its feet. But what if you attach a buttered piece of bread, 
butter-side up to a cat's back and toss them both out the window? Will the cat 
land on its feet? Or will the butter splat on the ground?

And in response, thus spoke the Oracle:

Even if you are too lazy to do the experiment yourself you should be able to 
deduce the obvious result. The laws of butterology demand that the butter must 
hit the ground, and the equally strict laws of feline aerodynamics demand that 
the cat can not smash its furry back. If the combined construct were to land, 
nature would have no way to resolve this paradox. Therefore it simply does not 
fall.

That's right, you clever mortal (well, as clever as a mortal can get), you have 
discovered the secret of antigravity! A buttered cat will, when released, 
quickly move to a height where the forces of cat-twisting and butter repulsion 
are in equilibrium. This equilibrium point can be modified by scraping off some 
of the butter, providing lift, or removing some of the cat's limbs, allowing 
descent.

Most of the civilized species of the Universe already use this principle to 
drive their ships while within a planetary system. The loud humming heard by 
most sighters of UFOs is, in fact, the purring of several hundred tabbies.

The one obvious danger is, of course, if the cats manage to eat the bread off 
their backs they will instantly plummet. Of course the cats will land on their 
feet, but this usually doesn't do them much good, since right after they make 
their graceful landing several tons of red-hot starship and *****ed-off aliens 
crash on top of them.


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Flaws In the Flying Cat Theory: A Response
Special to the Coastal Beacon
A logical analysis of the BFAD (Buttered Feline Antigravity Drive) propulsion 
theory clearly demonstrates the impossibility of such a system.

Let us begin with a simple analysis. 1) Buttered bread must fall butter side 
down. 2) A cat always lands on its feet.

While both theorems are indisputable, the oracle offers no proof of the 
construct. The oracle implies that anyone who 'would' test this construct would 
immediately find the secret of BFAD.

This is clearly nonsense.

Let us assume a normal Einsteinian universe (although a Euclidean universe 
would serve our purposes just as well, the Einsteinian is both cheaper and 
drinks are readily available.)

To test BFAD, one must procure:


Bread 
Butter (margarine, for some reason, will not work) 
A cat 
A strapping device. 
Let us assume that all of these are readily available.
Attach the strapping device to the cat.

See?

No cat.

What has happened? We have run up against an a priori universal law. By a 
priori, we mean that it takes priority over either the Buttered Bread Principle 
or the Law of Feline Landings.

What happens is that the instant a strapping device and a cat occupy the same 
four dimensional space, the cat disappears. Now, this can easily be tested, and 
has been repeatedly. There are two schools of thought about this phenomenon.

The first holds that a cat and a strapping device are constituted out of 
different fundamental building blocks. According to this theory, a cat is 
constituted primarily of superquarks, (called meows by current theorists.) 
These superquarks demonstrate qualities that are both atomic (constituted as 
they are of groupings of normal quark particles) and feline (because these 
quarks exhibit characteristic of "charmed" or "lucky" particles.) Again, 
according to this theory, strapping materials are fashioned out of non-charmed 
particles. Bringing the two together causes one or the other to cancel out. One 
aspect of this theory that has not been sufficiently explained to date is the 
fact that it is always the cat, not the strapping device, that disappears.

The second school of thought, and it is one that appears to be gaining ground 
in academic circles today, holds that cats are, in fact, super-intelligent 
pan-dimensional beings who exist in our four dimensional universe only because 
there is plenty of good food and a lot of creatures stupid enough to provide 
the food, along with plenty of attention.

Whenever a strapping device appears, the cat simply opens a door to a different 
series of dimensions, and goes on an extended tour.

According to this theory, purring is a cat's way of maintaining a constant 
balance cycling across multiple dimensions. This school holds that antigravity 
is impossible, but that theoretically, a REALLY good grip on a cat, while 
reaching for a strapping device, could result in our ability to cross 
dimensions with ease (barring scratches, that is.) Pessimists argue that if 
there were anything really interesting in those other dimensions, cats wouldn't 
spend so much time here, so why ask for a good scratching?

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