Here's another weekend physics question to contemplate - an excellent question for freshman phyics students to ponder:
Newton's law of inertia says that bodies in motion stay in motion, and those at rest stay at rest, unless a force acts upon them. Same applies to rotating bodies. You start a top spinning and it stays spinning unless a foce like friction interferes. Conversely, a top can't just start turn on its own starting from rest unless some outside force acts on it.
So here's the question: it is well known that if you suspend a cat upside down from a reasonable height and drop it, the cat is agile enough to land upright on its paws. So, how is the cat able to rotate in mid-air when there is no initial angular velocity imparted on it, and there is nothing for it to push against?:rolleyes: