1. The sun is too small to have fusion that had to have lasted for the past 4.5 billion years.
*answered*
Only if you admit that the sun is super dense and therefore has much more mass.
2. Gravity is the 'force' containing the enormous pressure in stars. Without it stars would not form and existing ones would supernova.
opinion.
Wrong. It is fact in the absolute respect of science. The laws of physics are not interchangeable or applied to reality when it is convenient for you.
3. The sun's radiation, as measured in Spectroscopy, is way too high to be that close (3,000 miles) without the Earth being uninhabitable.
Why?
Like I stated earlier: SUPER INTENSE RADIATION ACROSS THE ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM IS BAD FOR ORGANIC CELLS!
DEATH IS THE SIDE EFFECT IN THIS EXTREME OF A CIRCUMSTANCE!
4. The sun would appear to be an oval from an angle if it were in fact flat. Fusion can't take place in a flat star. If not flat (make up your minds), why does it act like a spotlight?
*answered*
Not answered. You say the Sun is round but only emits light from a flatten surface on it. A lot more is to be discussed here!
5. The sun would have to accelerate exponentially to appear to set from one view point yet other view points on the globe would contradict this view.
Explain.
Very well. The sun appears to travel at a constant speed across the sky. Yet, as it allegedly moves parallel to the surface of the Earth, the angle from the ground slows as it gets farther away. This means that in order to compensate for the effect that it
seems to revolve around the Earth at a constant speed, a FE sun would have to accelerate to get close to the horizon at the same change in angle per minute from an observer watching it set.
6. As the distance of the sun gets larger, the angle of sight for the sun decreases asymptotically to zero degrees. Since the human eye is not absolutely perfect, we will be overly generous in our experiment and say that a one degree angle over this vast difference wouldn't be seen. Suppose we also generously let the suns distance reach its maximum of the diameter of the Earth continuing to favor your side. 24,900 miles long 3,000 miles high makes the angle to see the sun as 6.86999 degrees. This would make the sun seem to approach the horizon but not get close enough to mistake it for setting. Keep in mind, that this also used a distance much greater than your theory allows with timezones.
*answered*
I was discussing this in the earlier thread. No one brought up that this was answered at all nor had any defense for it. If it was truly answered, please post a link to the thread as I can not find one.
By the way: Does this alleged answer say why the sun can visibly be seen to set abruptly from the pollution blocking our view? Or perhaps why it can be seen as a half circle on the horizon? It doesn't just approach the horizon. It gets cut in half by it as it sinks behind it. Refraction can not explain this like it could plausibly explain why it appears to touch.
Oog the caveman gave this point:
7.Illuminated clouds appear before sunrise over the curvature of the Earth.
This is the same answer as number 6. (*answered*)
This is not the same as number 6 because it is discussing the rays of light visibly emerging over the curved horizon. Number 6 is an FE model flaw, not direct evidence of RE. Unless they have the same answer which you claim exists
somewhere.