(P)oint...(R)adius.
Try to keep up.
And yet if you can refute Flat Earth, you fail to do so, instead resorting to insults which are entirely inaccurate. I suspect you are suffering from a touch of cognitive dissonance.He's an example of the quality of the STEM education our children are receiving today. He really needs to forget this garbage that he spouts, and get back to elementary school and start over, probably around kindergarten.
Shhh… don’t ask the questions that debunk FE theory… you’ll bring the entertainment to an end.So. If the moon is full and it's midnight, why doesn't the earth eclipse the moon?
So. If the moon is full and it's midnight, why doesn't the earth eclipse the moon?
thanks for the input kinda. my point i was making was, if things are as science says it is, why isnt there an eclipse every month. the earth passes between the two supposedly. instead we have a full moon every month.
the point is we are being lied to. and if so what else is 'science' lying about and why?
The easiest explanation is that the earth is spherical but the moon is flat and sometimes the solar winds blow the moon sideways and you only get a solar line instead of a solar eclipse.I can speculate, but I'm really not a Heliocentric believer. I would suppose since there are seasons, the sun would be positioned at different angles, and only certain angles make the magic happen with the moon. I was looking at this recently, not sure why you didn't do a google search.
Your either a science skeptic, or a closet flat earther. That's just a guess. In any event, I like the discussion, so don't mind the dialogue.
I think for many in the science community, they need an answer that isn't Biblical, so they stick to a projection, and fill in what works, in their train of thought. Evolution is their answer for Creation, that sort of thing.
Maybe many don't believe their lying, they believe a certain way, especially if it's outside of the Biblical framework. Just because someone believes something different, doesn't mean they are intentionally lying to you. Many people are taught and believe what their professors taught them.
I remember a math class in college and out of the blue, the professor encouraged the class not to believe the Bible. It was totally at left field. It had nothing to do with the subject matter. In any event, this is what secular universities teach. My brother went to a university and he told me a professor said, the Bible isn't true. If you finish with college, more than likely you don't believe the Bible.
Now if your in the hard core sciences, this is probably driven in even harder. And if you say, you believe in the Bible, you are laughed to scorn...More than likely. So, when someone rises up out of the ranks in the science world, they teach, what they were taught, and probably believe it. To say, they are intentionally lying to you may not be entirely accurate, but maybe they believe it.
The easiest explanation is that the earth is spherical but the moon is flat and sometimes the solar winds blow the moon sideways and you only get a solar line instead of a solar eclipse.
Since the curvature would be seen at the horizon, how far from the horizon would someone be at 35,000 feet to see curvature?It can be seen from about 35,000 feet.
If passengers can only see a very small segment of the curve, how do they know it is a curve?Passengers can only see a very small segment of the curve.
Very simple. The human eye is not good enough. The curvature is 200 mm (8") in 1.6 km (1 mile). Look down a long straight road sometime. There is no such thing as a dead flat road, but you will not be able to see anything but very large humps or depressions.Since the curvature would be seen at the horizon, how far from the horizon would someone be at 35,000 feet to see curvature?
If passengers can only see a very small segment of the curve, how do they know it is a curve?
If the human eye can detect curvature in such a small field of view, why can the human eye not see a much greater curve over a much wider field of view a lot closer to the ground? (i.e. - on a beach looking out at a 150-180 degree wide field of view - from as far as you can see to the left to as far as you can see to the right - a very long continuous ocean/horizon line)