An Open Thread: a place for things foolishly April, and other assorted discussions.
This thread is for the discussion of Less Wrong topics that have not appeared in recent posts. If a discussion gets unwieldy, celebrate by turning it into a top-level post.
Update: Tom McCabe has created a sub-Reddit to use for assorted discussions instead of relying on open threads. Go there for the sub-Reddit and discussion about it, and go here to vote on the idea.
No. Moving non-rigidly breaks things. Differences in acceleration on different parts of things break things.
Actually, from a frame of reference located somewhere on the breaking thing, wouldn't it be the differences in relative positions (not accelerations) of its parts that causes the break? After all, breakage occurs when (there exists a condition equivalently expressible as that in which) too much elastic energy is stored in the structure, and elastic energy is a function of its deformation -- change in relative positions of its parts.