A time lapse video was posted so you could "see" the visual evidence of how the sun moves across the sky on a flat earth, if you don't want to see it then you're just sticking you're head in the sand of a fake globe earth. Videos are not only acceptable they are necessary for this debate.
Dave I don't need a video to see how the sun moves across the sky. I can go outside and look for myself with my own eyes. And what I see doesn't remotely match what you are have been fooled into believing.
The sun drops below the vanishing point of our horizon line that limits how far we can see, God did not give us "unlimited" viewing ability.
I can understand that objects beyond my sight could get so small I couldn't see them but that dosn't match what the sun does. The sun clearly drops down behind the horizon at sunset. In fact the sun doesn't even get any smaller (at sunset) than when it's directly overhead. It drops down behind the horizon at sunset. You can see this as well. Everyone can.
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The clouds in these pics, and the sun, are not closer to the ground in the distance they seem that way because of how we view things in the distance. The ground rises up to our eye level and things in the sky drop down to our eye level and meet at the horizon line.
One of the reasons the clouds appear to drop behind the horizon is partially do to the fact that the earth is a sphere and the the curvature of the earth pronounces the angle that the clouds merge into the the horizon line. It's not simply perspective that causes the clouds to fade from view and head towards the horizon line. If the earth were flat NOTHING (in the sky) could drop below the horizon line. While perspective might cause them to lower as the move farther away they could never cross the horizon line as that would be physically impossible (unless of course they were actually moving down beyond the edge of the flat earth itself but you have said this doesn't happen so that point is moot).
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From this pic you can imagine the lower box to be a truck as it travels into the distance we view it going upward getting smaller as it gets further away from us. We can imagine the upper box to be the sun. As it travels away from us to gets lower and smaller until it reaches the horizon line and vanishes from our limited viewing distance. The sun, being much larger than a truck it can still be seen in the distance but once it travels past the horizon line we lose sight of it. Because the sun is much closer and much smaller than in the globe earth model, the light from it does not travel the great distance that the globe model does and does not illuminate the whole flat earth everywhere all at once.
--Dave
Based on your view what would happen is the sun would get really tiny and possibly near the horizon line (depending on how high you claim it sits) when it's furthest from me but that's NOT what happens. It's rather obvious what happens. The sun slowly sets a little bit at a time behind the horizon.
In fact.... there is a time at sunset when the sun is partially setting and some of it is behind the horizon while the rest of it is in full view, at full size. This fact completely and entirely debunks what you are trying to sell. This conversation is embarrassing for you. You are making a complete fool of yourself and should be ashamed.