Can you give a response that directly applies to the following?
You mean you can't walk outside and observe the Moons directional path? Does it go in the same direction as the Sun?
I mean I can go outside and see the Sun, Moon and celestial tropical belt stars go the same way. They all go from east to west.
Does this wording satisfy your demand?
That's better. You included the words "Moon, East and West" in a reply to a question I asked. Thank you.
Speaking of the surface of this Earth, what have you observed that proves to you Earth is a sphere?
Sunrise due east and sunset due west for each equinox.
Observed from:
Doha, Qatar - 25 degrees north
Winston-Salem, NC - 36 degrees north
Ohrid, Macedonia - 41 degrees north
Belgrade, Serbia - 45 degrees north
Frankfurt, Germany - 50 degrees north
Constant sun and moon angular diameter through the day.
Constant angular speed of celestial bodies through day.
Apparent horizon dip grows with altitude.
Horizon distance grows with altitude.
Measured distance to the Moon myself,
once in late 70s using 432 MHz radio waves,
once couple of years ago using sextant and lunar parallax.
Both times the result was somewhat over 380 000 kilometers.
Hills and buildings hidden more or less behind horizon when I change floor in tall building.
In hotel at sea shore horizon gets farther when I climb higher, and I see more or less
at the same moment of a day without waiting for refraction to change.
Shadow of horizon for sunset crawls up on building or hill behind me,
for sunrise on other building or hill crawls down.
Rayleigh scattering gives twilight at dawn and dusk.
There are many other things, too lazy to list them.