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Is ice frozen water, or is water melted ice? (Intellectuals) |
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Replies: 15 Last Post June 5 11:27am by Disposition
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The Raven
X-Rated
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I'll go ahead and say water is melted ice, from the viewpoint of ice originally coming to Earth in the form of comet material. If that is in fact how it happened.
------- You can only hold a smile for so long, after that it's just teeth.
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Bacon
Connoisseur
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Unless you've done an extensive tally on the amount of solidified H2O in the universe compared to liquid and gas, I don't think you are entitled to say anything on this matter.
------- "Everyone's got problems, troubled pasts, f-cking sh-t to deal with, but if you can let your work shine... The sh-t takes care of itself." - Gordon Ramsay
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norock
Connoisseur
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Quote: from Moridin at 9:00 am on May 12, 2008
Quote: from MattJ at 5:16 am on May 12, 2008
There is no cold, just lack of heat. So is the natural form of H2O water, or ice? In the universe, most places would be ice. In less than 1 percent of the universe there would be the water form. I'm not saying that there is water out there, just if there was water, the natural form would be ice. So is water melted ice? Or is ice frozen water? 
There is no such thing as cold or heat, just different velocities of particles and our descriptions of them. There is no such thing as a most "natural form" of H2O. "Liquid Water" / "Ice" do not exists as entities in themselves, but as noted earlier different manifestation and configurations of the same basic molecule. 
you have a habit of doing this moridin. there IS such a thing as cold and heat. though, as you describe it, cold is the result of slow moving particles and heat is the result of fast moving particles. the terms COLD and HEAT refer to these different states of molecules. to say they don't exist is like saying "air" doesn't exist, its just a collection of molecules. You must learn the difference between terms and the physical phenomena they represent. Your second point, however, i agree with. there definitely is no NATURAL form for H2O. If you wanted to you could theoretically measure the amount of H2O in the atmosphere and compare it to that of the ocean and that of the polar caps and determine the most ABUNDANT form, but certainly no one could argue that water has X as its natural state. the third point i disagree with again. Liquid water may not exist as a physical state of matter, but it surely exists. the TERM liquid refers to that state of matter in which the molecules act a certain way to give them properties of a liquid. This semantic way of discussing scientific phenomena of yours is really just pseudo-intellectualism. Sure the WORD liquid may not be a physical entity, but LIQUID --the actual physical representation of the word -- does exist.
------- ...life is good... ...mai ho oni i ka wai lana malie...
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11:26 am on May 12, 2008 | Joined Dec. 2006 | 342 Days Active Join to learn more about norock New York, United States | Straight Male | 4170 Posts | 7570 Points
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Wakeupcall
Executive
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Quote: from norock at 11:26 am on May 12, 2008
Quote: from Moridin at 9:00 am on May 12, 2008
Quote: from MattJ at 5:16 am on May 12, 2008
There is no cold, just lack of heat. So is the natural form of H2O water, or ice? In the universe, most places would be ice. In less than 1 percent of the universe there would be the water form. I'm not saying that there is water out there, just if there was water, the natural form would be ice. So is water melted ice? Or is ice frozen water? 
There is no such thing as cold or heat, just different velocities of particles and our descriptions of them. There is no such thing as a most "natural form" of H2O. "Liquid Water" / "Ice" do not exists as entities in themselves, but as noted earlier different manifestation and configurations of the same basic molecule. 
you have a habit of doing this moridin. there IS such a thing as cold and heat. though, as you describe it, cold is the result of slow moving particles and heat is the result of fast moving particles. the terms COLD and HEAT refer to these different states of molecules. to say they don't exist is like saying "air" doesn't exist, its just a collection of molecules. You must learn the difference between terms and the physical phenomena they represent. Your second point, however, i agree with. there definitely is no NATURAL form for H2O. If you wanted to you could theoretically measure the amount of H2O in the atmosphere and compare it to that of the ocean and that of the polar caps and determine the most ABUNDANT form, but certainly no one could argue that water has X as its natural state. the third point i disagree with again. Liquid water may not exist as a physical state of matter, but it surely exists. the TERM liquid refers to that state of matter in which the molecules act a certain way to give them properties of a liquid. This semantic way of discussing scientific phenomena of yours is really just pseudo-intellectualism. Sure the WORD liquid may not be a physical entity, but LIQUID --the actual physical representation of the word -- does exist. 
I second this. From an intellectual standpoint of course.
------- Why does it say France?br Because I'm out of the UK soon! XD
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Periwinkle
arr tee eff emm
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If I had to choose one, I'd say ice is frozen water because H20 is liquid at room temperature.
------- 'Cause online I'm out in Hollywood I'm 6 foot 5 and I look damn good I drive a Maserati, I'm a black-belt in karate And I love a good glass of wine
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camcool21
Personal Assistant
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I would say as a human being that ice is frozen water, because water is vital for our survival. As a species water is vital, therefore we have a far more personal connection with it compared to ice. While ice is quite useful for shin splints and cooling beverages, it is not even close to as necessary as water (unless melted...because then it is...but stop heating it after you melt it...because then it's gas...)
------- I thought I was wrong once, but I was mistaken.
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matto
Wealthy Hobo
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Quote: from Spasty at 8:55 pm on May 11, 2008
Water is H2O in the liquid state. Ice is H2O in the solid state. 
/agree... There is no "natural" form of H2O. It's all relative to the surroundings where it is. On EARTH, the natural form is water. In the UNIVERSE, it's probably ice, but how the hell should I know? That's pure speculation. There could be a hot planet with a water vapor atmosphere. I've read about a planet that possibly had water on it, but the massive strength of the gravitational pull crystalized the would-be water into an ice-like material. What's that count as?
------- Born, raised, and living in San Francisco Repping the Bay Area, having the time of my life.
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11:34 pm on June 4, 2008 | Joined Aug. 2007 | 168 Days Active Join to learn more about matto California, United States | Straight Male | 3230 Posts | 5905 Points
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Apotheosis
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being a human being on earth, i tend to consider most/all things to have their natural state at earth's room temperature, approximately. so i call water water, not melted ice.
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