Hello everybody. I’m brand new, this is my first post and I don’t expect there’ll be many more, but who knows. I’ve been reading Tom’s posts for a while and I’m finally giving in to my urge to respond because my god Tom, although you’re definitely not the worst FE proponent that I’ve seen here (which on it’s own is a scary thought), you display such a lack of critical thinking that it boggles my mind.
Many individuals have said it, and you’re just not getting it. There is no way that the law of perspective explains sunrises and sunsets, or even ships sinking into the horizon for that matter (especially if you watch them do this with a high powered telescope or a good pair of binoculars). No way, no how. This pseudoscience is worse than what creationists sometimes throw out there (no I’m not calling u a creationist). And yes, I have referred to Chapter 14. The mechanism described is no more valid today than it was over 100 years ago, plain and simple.
While the animation may have ended prematurely, that’s not the point. Yes we know it would eventually become indistinguishable from the horizon. The point is, by the time this happened; the sun would be a very small spot in the sky. Even if the atmosphere were responsible for blocking out the light of the sun over such great distances, what you would observe would be a sun getting smaller and fainter, not a sun suddenly dipping into the horizon, with its bottom half completely obscured in a matter of minutes. Yes I know about the refractive effects making it seem bigger, but these effects play tricks on your brain’s interpretation of the image, nothing more. A computer program would measure the size as being the same when it set as it was at its zenith.
And even if I were to concede that due to some funny unknown property of air, the sun were to somehow be magnified from a small circle to a larger disk at sunset and thus appear to remain similar in size despite it moving away, you would still observe the sun disappearing by gradually becoming fainter until it vanished. You wouldn’t see it abruptly dip into the horizon as it does.
Tom, even in primitive models of a flat earth, the sun was seen as going around this earth and not just circling overhead, because it doesn’t take a lot to figure out that these laws of perspective simply cannot account for the phenomena observed.