Please acknowledge before replying: I would like to keep this discussion informative, constructive, and enlightening. Please keep your replies in one of those three categories.
---> Golden rule... If you have nothing nice to say then please don't say anything at all. I have not been argumentative and do not wish to be.
-You'll have to excuse my drawings ; I am not an art major so this is the best I could do.
FE "Bendy Light" theory:Case 1: In FE bendy light theory light bends from an unknown force and this accounts for the horizon phenomenon. The picture with a flat earth depicts what wold happen if this were the case. The observer standing at a distance from the triangle on the same horizon has light bending toward him/her. This would cause a similar horizon phenomenon.
Case 2: The observer elevated above (perhaps on a tall building or mountain) cannot see the light from the triangle because it is bending back toward the source. The reason the light bends back toward the source is exactly because it bends. If light bends then it is traversing in an arc. An arc is a portion of a circle. So it is natural that the light would complete the circle and not reach the observer's eye standing on a tall object. This is NOT the case in real life.
Case 3: Because, in space, there is no distinction between up, down, left, right, in, or out; then the light must bend "down" an equal amount as it bends up. This is because light doesn't "know" what up is and thus bends equally in all directions in a sphere. Because of this, then the observer standing below the ground should be able to see the object because the light is bending "down" and can reach his/her eye. This is NOT the case.
Conclusion: Case 2 and 3 do not happen in ordinary life and thus disprove the theory.

