russ_watters said:
No. We're on Earth and the Earth is in orbit, so those forces are always canceled by our acceleration in the orbit.
i'm assuming you're referring to the fact that, b/c the Earth is in free-fall about the sun, the Earth does not feel the sun's gravitational pull? kinda like we don't feel the Earth's gravitational pull during sky diving (or any type of free-fall), but we do when we're on the ground and the ground is exerting a force on us? i.e. the force exerted on the Earth by the sun is canceled by the Earth's free-fall about the sun?
if i understand that much correctly, then i still don't understand how that automatically applies to objects on the Earth's surface. after all, your statement doesn't change the fact that the direction of the sun's gravitational influence on Earth's surface objects is constantly changing, nor does it change the fact that the distance between the sun and Earth's surface objects oscillates once a day (more so for objects near the equator, and less so for objects near the poles). as the Earth rotates, objects on its surface more or less move away from the sun and come closer again over a 24-hour rotational period of the earth. in other words, the combination of a surface object's radial and angular velocities with respect to the sun oscillates much more frequently (both every 24 hours and every 365.25 days) than the center of the Earth itself (only every 365.25 days). the center of the Earth orbits the sun in a near-circular ellipse, but a stationary object on the surface of the Earth orbits the sun in a path that resembles a spring or slinky connected end-to-end and stretched out into an ellipse that resembles our planet's orbit about the sun. so while the Earth's general radial distance from the sun oscillates in such a way that it has one maximum and one minimum per year, the radial distance of its surface objects to the sun oscillate in such a way that they have one max./min. per day AND one max./min. per year. if the distance between a stationary Earth surface object and the sun oscillates every 24 hours, then the sun's gravitational influence on that object must oscillate over the same 24-hour period, since any gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of that distance.
so if we get constant readings on a household scale for an object of known mass/weight regardless of what time of day it is or what time of year it is, then i have to assume that the sun's gravitational influence over Earth's surface objects (as well as the gravitational influence of other massive objects, such as the moon, other planets, etc.) is negligible in comparison to the Earth's gravitational influence over its surface objects (due to our proximity to the Earth and our vast separation from other massive solar system objects). this is in stark contrast to believing that the many gravitational forces external to the Earth are actually canceling each other out exactly such that the only resulting gravitational pull over the Earth's surface objects is from the Earth alone.
if we were talking about the earth, sun , and moon only, i might be able to stretch my imagination into thinking that, based on your original argument, we don't feel the sun's gravitational force b/c we are in free-fall around it, and likewise, we don't feel the moon's gravitational influence b/c it is in free-fall about the earth, and by convention, we are also in free-fall about the moon. but then how do we explain and cancel out the gravitational influences of bodies that are clearly not in orbit around us (or bodies that we are not orbiting), like the other planets, comets, asteroids and such? again, the only logical explanation i can come up with is that the gravitational influences of other massive solar system bodies are negligible in comparison to Earth's gravitational influence, and it is due solely to our proximity to the earth.
this is definitely not the definitive answer, as I'm not super confident in my response. but i would like to know if I'm on the right track...