Sure Dave, just plug your ears and believe what you want.
You can't deny logic.
--Dave
Sure Dave, just plug your ears and believe what you want.
Don't be coy. Please provide "the answer" so that we can all interact with the discussion substantively.How do we test for perspective?
Before I give the answer I yield the floor to you all first to explain perspective.
--Dave
I don't deny logic, I leave that up to you.You can't deny logic.
--Dave
You digress, and you are also ignorant of modern physics. Like it or not, Einstein was right.
Don't be coy. Please provide "the answer" so that we can all interact with the discussion substantively.
AMR
I don't deny logic, I leave that up to you.
Strange atmospheric conditions are NOT THE NORM. So quit fixating on them as if they are the answer.
Distance objects ON the SURFACE of the EARTH cannot be see over great distances because the CURVED surface of the EARTH gets in the way.
This is one CLEAR DISPROOF of the "flat earth model".
Gee Dave.... back to the same old worn out invalid "argument".Unless perspective is the reason, or one of the reasons, that we cannot see very far into the distance.
--Dave
Gee Dave.... back to the same old worn out invalid "argument".
Optical perspective simply means that things that are farther away appear smaller.... that's ALL there is to it Dave.Put your money on the table and make a comment on what perspective is if I'm wrong.
--Dave
Perspective means the earth beneath our feet appears to rise up in the distance when actually it does not.
Things in the sky appear to fall downward before us in the distance when they actually do not.
--Dave
Sorry, this is not a rational answer let alone an answer.
No matter how you say it the fact remains waters are not level/flat/straight on a globe over any distance.
--Dave
There are different phenomena that cause differing effects. There is the phenomenon of different air densities that cause light to bend, which is no different than what happens with a pencil that is partly submerged in water. And there is another phenomenon that causes light to bounce off it like a mirror. These phenomena are not the same, but could be present at the same time. Then do not contradict each other any more than a pencil that appears to "bend" in water contradicts seeing that same pencil in a mirror. So I don't understand your claim of contradiction.That we are not seeing the actual city of Chicago but an image of it and over it but that this is not reflection is a contradictory statement because any image of anything that not the actual thing is a "reflection" of it.
The inconsistency of this argument is clear and causes doubts about globe earth to the rationally minded.
--Dave
So you are adopting the usual abracadabra argument of the flat earth proponent? Sigh.
https://www.quora.com/What-do-Flat-...s-the-horizontal-plane-which-we-know-the-Sun#
https://www.quora.com/Can-the-rotun...ASA’s-the-government’s-or-the-military’s-data
Etc:
https://www.quora.com/profile/Bill-Hazelton-1
AMR
There are different phenomena that cause differing effects. There is the phenomenon of different air densities that cause light to bend, which is no different than what happens with a pencil that is partly submerged in water. And there is another phenomenon that causes light to bounce off it like a mirror. These phenomena are not the same, but could be present at the same time. Then do not contradict each other any more than a pencil that appears to "bend" in water contradicts seeing that same pencil in a mirror. So I don't understand your claim of contradiction.
Secondly, in a way, I suppose you can say that what you see in a mirror is not the real item. But will you admit that isn't true for looking at something through a magnifying glass?
Optical perspective simply means that things that are farther away appear smaller.... that's ALL there is to it Dave.
This video show it very simply and concisely:
We know (even flat earther's, but apparently not you) that the diameter of the earth is FAR MORE the 3000 miles. I've shown you the math a million times and STILL you make these types of silly claims.Ok, the ground rises up and things get smaller the further away they get.
Imagine the tennis ball in the pic rising up over your head. What happens? It shrinks in size proportionately to the distance along the flat surface.
A tennis ball directly in front of you 10 feet away appears the same size 10 feet directly above you. Right? So, the sun 3,000 miles directly above you would look the same size 3,000 miles away from you at the horizon. Right?
--Dave
So you're admitting that in order for the sun to appear the same size to you above the horizon as it would above your head, on a flat earth it would have to be ground level 3000 miles away? Pretty sure someone would notice that... Which means that (once again) the FE model falls... Well... Flat at explaining reality.Ok, the ground rises up and things get smaller the further away they get.
Imagine the tennis ball in the pic rising up over your head. What happens? It shrinks in size proportionately to the distance along the flat surface.
A tennis ball directly in front of you 10 feet away appears the same size 10 feet directly above you. Right? So, the sun 3,000 miles directly above you would look the same size 3,000 miles away from you at the horizon. Right?
--Dave
That would be a debate but in another thread.
--Dave
We know (even flat earther's, but apparently not you) that the diameter of the earth is FAR MORE the 3000 miles. I've shown you the math a million times and STILL you make these types of silly claims.
What happened to you Dave? It's these sorts of things that get you people telling you that you are not "fair and balanced", but looking dishonest instead.
NONSENSE Dave.... just repeating IDIOCY does not make it become true.The point is, regardless of distance, the sun over a flat earth will look relatively the same over head as it does at the horizon. The change in size would not be as dramatic has been argued by critics.
--Honest Dave