The FE sun is impossible [revisited]

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #120 on: October 01, 2008, 06:21:12 AM »
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1. Presenting why perception would work that way.

The way it works is described clearly in the literature listed in my signature link. If you had bothered to READ THE MATERIAL you wouldn't be asking these questions.

The way it fails is described clearly in my post listed above in this discussion. If you had bothered to READ THE POST you wouldn't be responding this way. For like the billionth time, I read ENaG.

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Perspective works exactly the way it is taught in art schools except that at a certain point in the distance the perspective lines will become so close together that they appear to merge. This is called the Vanishing Point. It's an effect due to the angular limits of the human eye. The Vanishing Effect occurs where the eye cannot resolve any further, causing distant bodies to appear to merge into the earth's surface as they shrink into the distance.
This is true as under the condition you are suggesting it shrinks uniformly; not from the bottom up.

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Cyrus Teed described the perspective effect which causes distant ships to disappear from the bottom up in his book Cellular Cosmogony

I already explained why this is flawed. I will slap you with the link again:
http://theflatearthsociety.org/forum/index.php?topic=18286.msg326520#msg326520

Read it this time.
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #121 on: October 01, 2008, 11:54:02 AM »
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So if we get images taken from above the seas and swells (maybe 70 feet or so), but without land in the way, those would be valid images?  I am just checking.  Because if we are able to get images above the sea and swell, that would mean that they aren't interfering with the visibility of the ship's hull, and even something as simple as binoculars would be able to bring an 800 foot ship's hull back into view.  Am I interpreting that correctly?

Yes. If you're putting your camera right near the ocean's sea level, of course there will be waves and swells in the way.

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-The perspective is wrong because it tries to draw perspective lines from the view of a third person, not the observer: Perspective is an observer-only phenomenon.

Third person? I don't know what you're talking about. SBR draws perspective lines for the observer.

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-The sun's constant size is now attributed to "bendy light", an admission by FEers that Robothem was wrong, surely?

This is a different topic to the sunken hull effect. But nonetheless it's all explained in Earth Not a Globe. Read it.

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-The mechanism for tides is completely without foundation, evidence, or common-sense.  It's a "gludge" to get the moon out of the equation.

SBR provides plenty of evidence in Earth Not a Globe. Read it.

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For all that Tom goes on about ENAG, if someone redid the Bedford Level experiment well away from the oceans ability "to curve in the telescope",

The bedford canal experiment wasn't done across an ocean. It was done over a long canal with standing water.

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Strange that my shots show only a few metres of hull being hidden by "waves" for the ships but the island has 10s of metres of land hidden by those very same waves.

Perspective allows small things in the way to obscure bigger things in the distance. When you hold out a penny an arms length away perspecive allows it to block out the sun. Does that mean that a penny is as large as the sun?

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The way it fails is described clearly in my post listed above in this discussion. If you had bothered to READ THE POST you wouldn't be responding this way. For like the billionth time, I read ENaG.

Then you should read Earth Not a Globe again, because apparently you didn't comprehend the material well enough.

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This is true as under the condition you are suggesting it shrinks uniformly; not from the bottom up.

Right. As a ship recedes it will shrink uniformily and be obscured from the bottom up by either waves and swells in the foreground (if on the ocean), or by the eventual angular limits of the human eye as described in the literature (if on a calm body of water such as a lake or canal).

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I already explained why this is flawed. I will slap you with the link again:

Really? Where did you prove that the human eye had an infinite angular resolution and that the Vanishing Point did not exist?
« Last Edit: October 01, 2008, 12:00:09 PM by Tom Bishop »

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #122 on: October 01, 2008, 02:22:43 PM »
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The way it fails is described clearly in my post listed above in this discussion. If you had bothered to READ THE POST you wouldn't be responding this way. For like the billionth time, I read ENaG.

Then you should read Earth Not a Globe again, because apparently you didn't comprehend the material well enough.
You should try reading my post again, because apparently you didn't comprehend the material well enough. I understood every sentence in ENaG which is why I bother to expose it.

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This is true as under the condition you are suggesting it shrinks uniformly; not from the bottom up.

Right. As a ship recedes it will shrink uniformily and be obscured from the bottom up by either waves and swells in the foreground (if on the ocean), or by the eventual angular limits of the human eye as described in the literature (if on a calm body of water such as a lake or canal).

First, learn to spell uniformly.
If the line of sight is at the topmost point of the highest wave, no more sight of the boat will be lost than the height of that wave. The water was far too calm in those pictures to lose that much off the bottom of the ship. Eye sight is actually greater than the wave height allowing us to see past higher waves anyways.

No distance would cause the bottom of the ship disappear to be blocked by the waves more than if it were close.

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I already explained why this is flawed. I will slap you with the link again:

Really? Where did you prove that the human eye had an infinite angular resolution and that the Vanishing Point did not exist?

That's not what I argued, confirming my suspicion that you didn't comprehend it, hence you should read it again.
« Last Edit: October 01, 2008, 02:31:48 PM by ﮎingulaЯiτy »
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zamadatix

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #123 on: October 01, 2008, 02:32:50 PM »
what about the REALLY calm days on lake Erie, the water barely moves at all, how can waves be blocking my view of the ship?

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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #124 on: October 01, 2008, 03:23:19 PM »
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First, learn to spell uniformly.
If the line of sight is at the topmost point of the highest wave, no more sight of the boat will be lost than the height of that wave. The water was far too calm in those pictures to lose that much off the bottom of the ship. Eye sight is actually greater than the wave height allowing us to see past higher waves anyways.

Dyno isn't that high up in the shots where the ship is sunken. Dyno's camera is right near the water's surface, maybe three feet above sea level when he's looking out at the partially obscured ship.

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what about the REALLY calm days on lake Erie, the water barely moves at all, how can waves be blocking my view of the ship?

On lakes and other bodies of calm water the ship's hull can be restored by a telescope, proving that it is not really behind the convexity of the earth.

See the Lake Michigan Experiments: http://www.sacred-texts.com/earth/cc/cc21.htm

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #125 on: October 01, 2008, 03:26:30 PM »
Dyno isn't that high up in the shots where the ship is sunken. Dyno's camera is right near the water's surface, maybe three feet above sea level when he's looking out at the partially obscured ship.
I gave a picture without a scale or any numbers. The concept is the same no matter the height or distance.  ::)
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #126 on: October 01, 2008, 03:27:36 PM »
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I gave a picture without a scale or any numbers. The concept is the same no matter the height or distance.  ::)

Not if the observer is below the height of the highest wave or swell between the observer and the ship's hull.
« Last Edit: October 01, 2008, 03:29:27 PM by Tom Bishop »

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #127 on: October 01, 2008, 03:32:31 PM »
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I gave a picture without a scale or any numbers. The concept is the same no matter the height or distance.  ::)

Not if the observer is below the height of the highest wave or swell between the observer and the ship's hull.
You can see the waves were not over 3 feet in height above the rest of the water. They would grow in size as it climbs the slanted seabed until reaching beach at an even higher elevation. The mere fact that the camera was there and used to take many pictures tells us the waves were not so violent. Waves become more pronounced at shores, not deeper into the water.
« Last Edit: October 01, 2008, 03:34:36 PM by ﮎingulaЯiτy »
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #128 on: October 01, 2008, 03:39:46 PM »
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You can see the waves were not over 3 feet in height above the rest of the water.

Are you kidding? At my local beach a high wave suitable for surfboarding comes in every eleventh wave or so like clockwork.

What actual evidence do you have that there were no high waves or swells between Dyno's camera and the ship's hull?
« Last Edit: October 01, 2008, 03:48:52 PM by Tom Bishop »

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #129 on: October 01, 2008, 03:52:19 PM »
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You can see the waves were not over 3 feet in height above the rest of the water.

Are you kidding? At my local beach a high wave suitable for surfboarding comes in every fourteenth wave or so like clockwork.
Then the beach must have a very large sweeping area for the waves; (the where the wave is spread over shore and recedes again.)

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What actual evidence do you have that there were no high waves or swells between Dyno's camera and the ship's hull?
The fact that the waves in the foreground, for ALL the pictures, are calm.


Isn't it time for you to run away yet?
« Last Edit: October 01, 2008, 04:08:34 PM by ﮎingulaЯiτy »
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #130 on: October 01, 2008, 04:34:32 PM »
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The fact that the waves in the foreground, for ALL the pictures, are calm.

How can you tell how high those waves are by looking at Dyno's picture?  ???

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #131 on: October 01, 2008, 05:20:02 PM »
By the shape, abundance, and contrast. I think it's rather obvious, but if you are having difficulty, compare them to this image and note the lack of variation.
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #132 on: October 01, 2008, 05:20:53 PM »
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By the shape, abundance, and contrast. I think it's rather obvious, but if you are having difficulty, compare them to this image and note the lack of variation.

I don't see anything hidden in that picture.

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #133 on: October 01, 2008, 06:26:30 PM »
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By the shape, abundance, and contrast. I think it's rather obvious, but if you are having difficulty, compare them to this image and note the lack of variation.

I don't see anything hidden in that picture.
.. and why are you looking for something that's hidden?  ???
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #134 on: October 01, 2008, 08:01:27 PM »
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.. and why are you looking for something that's hidden?  ???

I don't see a half obscured island in that picture.

What point are you trying to make with it?

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #135 on: October 01, 2008, 11:28:23 PM »
How can you tell how high those waves are by looking at Dyno's picture?  ???

We can look at the wetted area of the ship's hull.  Using the draft marks painted on the hull itself, we can accurately estimate the height of the seas.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #136 on: October 02, 2008, 12:43:39 AM »
Perspective allows small things in the way to obscure bigger things in the distance. When you hold out a penny an arms length away perspecive allows it to block out the sun. Does that mean that a penny is as large as the sun?

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Rig Navigator

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #137 on: October 02, 2008, 01:06:39 AM »
Perspective allows small things in the way to obscure bigger things in the distance. When you hold out a penny an arms length away perspecive allows it to block out the sun. Does that mean that a penny is as large as the sun?

So if we get images taken from above the seas and swells (maybe 70 feet or so), but without land in the way, those would be valid images?  I am just checking.  Because if we are able to get images above the sea and swell, that would mean that they aren't interfering with the visibility of the ship's hull, and even something as simple as binoculars would be able to bring an 800 foot ship's hull back into view.  Am I interpreting that correctly?

Oh look, I can post my prior responses too.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #138 on: October 02, 2008, 01:16:22 AM »
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So if we get images taken from above the seas and swells (maybe 70 feet or so), but without land in the way, those would be valid images?  I am just checking.  Because if we are able to get images above the sea and swell, that would mean that they aren't interfering with the visibility of the ship's hull, and even something as simple as binoculars would be able to bring an 800 foot ship's hull back into view.  Am I interpreting that correctly?

You are correct, except that it might take something a little better than binoculars to bring back a body lost to the Vanishing Point. The accounts in the literature mostly used telescopes. But Binoculars might do it if sufficiently powerful, who knows.

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Moon squirter

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #139 on: October 02, 2008, 01:51:49 AM »
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So if we get images taken from above the seas and swells (maybe 70 feet or so), but without land in the way, those would be valid images?  I am just checking.  Because if we are able to get images above the sea and swell, that would mean that they aren't interfering with the visibility of the ship's hull, and even something as simple as binoculars would be able to bring an 800 foot ship's hull back into view.  Am I interpreting that correctly?

You are correct, except that it might take something a little better than binoculars to bring back a body lost to the Vanishing Point. The accounts in the literature mostly used telescopes. But Binoculars might do it if sufficiently powerful, who knows.

Tom, object never actually "disappears" at the vanishing point. The just get smaller and smaller.   The apparent size of an object (angle of view) can be expressed as:

a = tan-1(h/d)      h = size of object, d is distance from observer.

Therefore for large values of d, tan-1 becomes irrelevant and the equation tends to a = h/d.  (is a is in radians)

Therefore, the apparent size (angle of view) of a distant object is (approximately) inversely proportional to distance. So it's never really "lost to the vanishing point".

BTW this is one of the few instances where I can actually "prove" you are wrong.
« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 01:58:59 AM by Moon squirter »
I haven't performed it and I've never claimed to. I've have trouble being in two places at the same time.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #140 on: October 02, 2008, 02:11:45 AM »
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Tom, object never actually "disappears" at the vanishing point. The just get smaller and smaller.

And how is man supposed to see infinitely as a body shrinks into the distance if his eyes do not allow him to?

There will be a point when a body shrinks so small into the horizon that the eye cannot distinguish sea from hull. This limit to the human eye is called the Vanishing Point. Samuel Birley Rowbotham articulates that the vanishing point is created when the perspective lines are angled less than one minute of a degree. Hence, this effectively places the vanishing point a finite distance away from the observer.
« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 02:20:23 AM by Tom Bishop »

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Moon squirter

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #141 on: October 02, 2008, 02:32:19 AM »
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Tom, object never actually "disappears" at the vanishing point. The just get smaller and smaller.

And how is man supposed to see infinitely as a body shrinks into the distance if his eyes do not allow him to?

There will be a point when a body shrinks so small into the horizon that the eye cannot distinguish sea from hull.

He obviously cannot see "infinitely", with anything.  -You used the expression "lost to the vanishing point", which was wholly inaccurate. 

I'm saying it's not just the "hull" that shrinks, but the whole ship (at the same rate).   This is not what you or Rowbothem (with his perspective lines) are saying.

Update (as you updated).   How on earth can the vanishing point be a set "finite distance away from the observer?".   The eye's ability to resolve an object is dependent on (in addition to distance) object size, contrast, brighness, etc.   There is not "finite distance".    /Fail.


« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 02:42:08 AM by Moon squirter »
I haven't performed it and I've never claimed to. I've have trouble being in two places at the same time.

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #142 on: October 02, 2008, 03:21:09 AM »
And how is man supposed to see infinitely as a body shrinks into the distance if his eyes do not allow him to?

This is where the use of a telescope or binoculars come in.  The binoculars or telescope magnify the image and overcome the lower limit of visual acuity.


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There will be a point when a body shrinks so small into the horizon that the eye cannot distinguish sea from hull. This limit to the human eye is called the Vanishing Point. Samuel Birley Rowbotham articulates that the vanishing point is created when the perspective lines are angled less than one minute of a degree. Hence, this effectively places the vanishing point a finite distance away from the observer.

Once again, this is where the use of a telescope or binoculars comes in.  This would move that will allow the observer to view objects that are smaller than one arc minute.

You also have to take into account contrast when considering the vanishing point...

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The smallest detectable visual angle produced by a single fine dark line against a uniformally illuminated background is also much less than foveal cone size or regular visual acuity. In this case, under optimal conditions, the limit is about 0.5 arc seconds, or only about 2% of the diameter of a foveal cone. This produces a contrast of about 1% with the illumination of surrounding cones. The mechanism of detection is the ability to detect such small differences in contrast or illumination, and does not depend on the angular width of the bar, which cannot be discerned. Thus as the line gets finer, it appears to get fainter but not thinner.

Objects that blend are less visible from long distances than ones that don't, but I will assume that you already know this.  With high contrast (lit against dark, or black against white, or white against black), it becomes easier to discern objects against a background.

Of course, none of this explains why perspective says that all parts of the viewed object shrink at a uniform rate, and observation of ships moving over the horizon have the hull disappear first with the superstructure and masts retaining their relative position and size.
« Last Edit: October 03, 2008, 01:17:39 AM by Rig Navigator »

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #143 on: October 02, 2008, 07:52:30 AM »
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.. and why are you looking for something that's hidden?  ???

I don't see a half obscured island in that picture.

What point are you trying to make with it?
By the shape, abundance, and contrast. I think it's rather obvious, but if you are having difficulty, compare them to this image and note the lack of variation.
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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #144 on: October 02, 2008, 07:52:53 AM »
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This is where the use of a telescope or binoculars come in.  The binoculars or telescope magnify the image and overcome the lower limit of visual acuity.

Well yes, people have been able to restore half sunken hulls on lakes and other calm bodies of water by looking at it through a telescope, proving that they were not really behind the convexity of the earth.

Thanks for keeping up.
« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 08:25:03 AM by Tom Bishop »

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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #145 on: October 02, 2008, 07:56:50 AM »
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This is where the use of a telescope or binoculars come in.  The binoculars or telescope magnify the image and overcome the lower limit of visual acuity.

Well yes, that's why people have been able to restore half sunken hulls on lakes and canals by looking at it through a telescope.

Thanks for keeping up.

Your assuming that the hull will disappear before the rest of the ship as a function of perspective. As something appears to become smaller in size, the whole becomes less visible at the same rate. We already discussed this. It appears to shrink UNIFORMLY.

You have yet to respond to my post I linked you too. I would understand if you were a slow reader but I draw the line at days.
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Moon squirter

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #146 on: October 02, 2008, 08:22:25 AM »
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This is where the use of a telescope or binoculars come in.  The binoculars or telescope magnify the image and overcome the lower limit of visual acuity.

Well yes, that's why people have been able to restore half sunken hulls on lakes and canals by looking at it through a telescope.

Thanks for keeping up.

No no Tom, whole ship shrinks (not sinks), at the same rate.   This is not what you or Rowbothem (with his perspective lines) are saying.   Please refer to be previous post on the relationship between distance and apparent size.

Rowbothem's perspective theory is wrong.  There no way you can win this.

I haven't performed it and I've never claimed to. I've have trouble being in two places at the same time.

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Tom Bishop

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #147 on: October 02, 2008, 08:30:32 AM »
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Your assuming that the hull will disappear before the rest of the ship as a function of perspective. As something appears to become smaller in size, the whole becomes less visible at the same rate. We already discussed this. It appears to shrink UNIFORMLY.

On a lake or other calm body of water the ship appears to shrink UNIFORMLY into the vanishing point.

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No no Tom, whole ship shrinks (not sinks), at the same rate.   This is not what you or Rowbothem (with his perspective lines) are saying.   Please refer to be previous post on the relationship between distance and apparent size.

On a calm surface when the ship shrinks into the Vanishing Point it appears to sink into the water as it recedes because it is at such a distance that the eye cannot discern the hull from the sea.

People have been able to restore the hull by looking at the half sunken hull through a telescope, proving that it is not really behind a convex earth: http://www.sacred-texts.com/earth/cc/cc21.htm

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markjo

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #148 on: October 02, 2008, 08:54:53 AM »
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This is where the use of a telescope or binoculars come in.  The binoculars or telescope magnify the image and overcome the lower limit of visual acuity.

Well yes, people have been able to restore half sunken hulls on lakes and other calm bodies of water by looking at it through a telescope, proving that they were not really behind the convexity of the earth.

Thanks for keeping up.

And you have yet to provide any photographic documentation of this phenomenon.  Thanks for staying behind.

P.S.  Drawings don't count as they are easier to fake than photos.
« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 08:57:01 AM by markjo »
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ﮎingulaЯiτy

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Re: The FE sun is impossible [revisited]
« Reply #149 on: October 02, 2008, 09:21:09 AM »
On a calm surface when the ship shrinks into the Vanishing Point it appears to sink into the water as it recedes because it is at such a distance that the eye cannot discern the hull from the sea.
Uh no. If the eye can't discern the hull then it can't discern the sail (if both are about the same size) because both shrink at the same rate. Something of equal size and equal distance would be equally easy or equally difficult to distinguish. Hence the 'uniform' discussion.  ::)
« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 09:23:32 AM by ﮎingulaЯiτy »
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