I have already said that the burden of proof is on you (refer to the formula above - which you have not disputed) therefore you keep asking me what my model of the earth is - well I do not have some advanced model with 150 foot ice walls (that notion sounds equally ridiculous to me as it does to you I imagine) and to formulate such a model is a mistake in the context of this argument because the focus will instantly turn to my model - "how can that be the model?" you will say, "surely my round earth model is much more likely to be the actual model even though it is based on similar assumptions as your model". Which due to the stranglehold your faith in your assumptions has over you is an argument you would never accept - even if I had some "perfect" flat earth model that I don't profess to have (unlike the flat earth society).
Please be quiet about your "formula". It is not a formula. It is a horrible piece of reasoning at best. Here's an alternative: the entire world thinks (knows) one thing. You think something else. THE BURDEN OF PROOF IS ON YOU. Simply enough for you?
So you are basically admiting you have no idea how a flat earth could even work. You can't propose a model that has any chance of working, yet you somehow suggest it's favorable to accept it anyway. I am making the claim that NO MATTER WHAT model you propose, I will show you that it is IMPOSSIBLE. If you cannot rise to the ocassion to provide a counterexample, then I rest my case.
If you want to continually challenge my use of accepted science in my arguments, WHY ARE YOU POSTING IN THE FIRST PLACE? I can say I think the earth is really a monkey's asscheek and you can't prove it wrong. If I throw all science and logic out the window, there is no reason to prefer one theory over the other. You have zero case to pick one theory over any other, so I ask you:
on what grounds should we select a theory to believe?If science and logic aren't grounds enough, I have no idea what is.
As I have already shown however, the fact that you find one more likely than the other does not matter when the actual model is concerned - if ghost pirates did exist then you would not think they existed and favour a much more likely (in your opinion) guess as to why a ship would "vanish". Nevertheless the fact would remain that the ship's disappearance was the result of ghost pirates - to treat your guess as 100% accurate simply because you happen to think it more likely than other guesses is absurd.
If this is your logic, then there's no reason to reject ghost pirates is there? But again, we have to pick an opinion based on something: So why not "Which is more likely...a round earth, or ghost pirates?" If you want to select your beliefs based on what you think is *possible* and completely ignore what is more *likely*, then I propose my the earth is a monkey's asscheek theory. By your standards, you can't disprove it.
I'm trying to ask you to open your mind and consider why you think you know the earth is round, why you know for absolute certain 100% that it is round and once you consider this you will see that your "proof" is in fact not incompatible with a flat earth as you would like to think but based on a whole series of assumptions - like the perfect nature of navigational equipment (an example of your masochist tendencies concerning science - I could list thousands of inventions that were deemed to be "perfect", the first clocks for example, which lost seconds over the course of a year but were presumed "perfect" because their inventors said so). Therefore, what I am attempting to show you is not an alternative model (based on different assumptions to yours - which nevertheless are assumptions) but to show how your "proof" is not incompatible with a flat earth.
I, unlike you, am not ignorant to the success of science. Us conversing over a computer among countless other things is direct proof of its success. No one said anything about "perfect" instrumentation, but a minor error isn't going to make someone think they went around the world when they haven't. Shut up about the "perfect" instrumentation, I never made the claim. You have yet to show how even flawed instrumentation is going to fool someone to so great a degree as to make them think they went around the world when in fact, they took some other path to get back where they started. As well, some mechanism that no matter when this occurs, the exact same circumstances occur to fool people in the exact same away.
Well I certainly don't feel like repeating myself so I will ask you to read the first section of my post again. You are getting bogged down arguing over my example as to how your proof is not incompatible with a flat earth (not to mention the historical precedent concerning issues such as these - the fairies are clearly not the only example). Again you say your guess is more likely than my example as if this is somehow proof that your guess is 100% accurate.
It's not my fault your examples are scientifically impossible. Like I said, if you want to throw science completely out the window, ON WHAT BASIS can we even have an argument? We must start accepting every monkey-butt theory out there.
No, I happen to know your theory of what space consists of, I was clearly alluding to the idea that we have never been in space to formulate such "concrete" theories of what space consists of and even if we had been in space to formulate such theories that would not give them the concrete proof that "this is how light travels" in space. I refer back to the example of the sea, given a sample of water from the dead sea (having never had a sample of sea water) we would come to the conclusion that "all of the sea naturally has the same salt content as this sample" this would be taken on as dogma by the likes of yourself and anyone who disagreed with this would be ridiculed and attacked for daring to question the assumption that the individual or small group of scientists who made this proclamation may have in fact got it wrong - and in this case did get it very wrong. If we can't get it right about our own oceans then how can we trust theories concerning something as vast as space - and of course this is if you assume that human beings have ventured into space in the first place.
The theories are not such as they are arbitrarily. They are as they are because they are the best at explaining the world. We located some of the planets in our solar system thanks to our theory of gravity. Our model of gravity PREDICTED planets in certain locations, we pointed our telescopes there, and BAM we found them. That is what good theories do, and that is why I (and anyone with half a brain) accept them more readily than ghost pirates. (Or any similiar example). By the same token, a round earth explains all of my examples without resorting to impossible situations. I can easily and clearly explain the seasons, time zones, horizon, photos of the earth, and everything else. It is clearly far better than anything that has come out of your mouth.
I have given an explanation of how a ship (or any object) disappears from vision when it reaches a certain distance from the viewer - it is amazing how many people seem to think that humans are blessed with the incredible eyesight to be able to see something in front of them even if it is thousands of miles away. What you are discussing here however (and I misread this at first so apologies) is the phenomena of a ship appearing to disappear from the bottom up - i.e. the bottom of the ship disappears - the top remains the same size then disappears completely as if it were travelling over a hill. Well at the risk of parrotting you here, I am going to say that just because you say it is so does not make it so - I have never once stood on a beach and watched a ship disappear from view in this way, I challenge you to provide video footage or some other evidence to prove this because whenever I have stood and watched something disappear in the distance it has been the result of it becoming hazy in amongst cloud etc - on a dull day, on a perfectly clear day the only way I have seen a ship disappear from sight has been in the manner I described before - with the gradual shrinking out of view as it gets farther away.
So your answer here is: I haven't seen it, so I don't believe people when they say it. I'm not going to argue with that. I HAVE seen it, and I believed it even before I did. Why should I bother to produce a video? You think the entire space program is a fake, why should video evidence for anything I say be any different?
However, my point is that for seasons and timezones to exist, all that is required is that the sun move in two directions to the earth at the one time - the shape of the planet being round is not a fundamental requirement for timezones and seasons to exist as you want it to be. I offered an illustrative example of this (that is all that was an illustrative example). The problem with the "sun being at the other side of the world" is rectified by simply adding a slight rotation to the earth - because I do not believe like some of the more naive "flat earthers" have believed that the earth is 100% stationary.
I am saying you are wrong. I am saying you cannot describe a way for this to be possible without an obvious contradiction that everyone can see for themselves. I am noticing that you are refusing to even try, and when you do quickly cover your ass and say "It's not my SPECIFIC model that's important". Yes, it is. If you can't even provide a POSSIBLE model, then you have nothing. I think your premise is flawed, I think your logic is flawed, and I don't think you have a prayer of providing a possible example. Adding a rotation to the earth? That does not remedy the problem. You can't just throw a term out there and expect that to be enough. HOW does a rotation fix that problem?
I did not say that the amount of sunlight = the amount of heat at any given moment. Temperatures on the earth are far more complex than simply - more sun = hotter. The North pole may have the most sunlight at a given point in the year - it does in your round earth model too I hate to tell you :roll: - but that does not mean it is the hottest place on the planet. Two reasons are that firstly a great amount of heat in our planet comes from the earth itself - the amount of heat absorbed by the ground being released or for example, phenomena like the gulf stream which keeps the UK much warmer than countries further East of it (which if the only cause of temperature on earth were the position of the sun at that moment should surely be exactly the same temperature as the UK). As the North Pole is not exposed to the greatest aggregate amount of sunlight over the course of the year but rather the countries on the traditional "equator" are, then naturally it is not the warmest place on the planet. Secondly, as the sun would move in two directions it is entirely plausible that the North pole at a given point will be exposed to sunlight for 24 hours a day, however at an intensity less than points on the planet which are exposed to the sun for 12 hours for example - and consequently receiving more heat though less sunlight. I expect you will scoff at this suggestion but this is after all how things are supposed to work in the round earth theory - the North Pole receiving 24 hours of sunshine does not make it the warmest place on earth.
According to you, seasons are caused because of the location of the sun. When it's more north, it gets hotter. That seems to be a pretty direct endorsement of "more light = more heat". Only NOW are you adding "other factors", which you completely neglect to elaborate on. If the location of the sun can produce seasons, how can it be bearing down on the north pole for 3 months and not heat it to the same degree as well? I think no matter how you choose to proceed, you contradict yourself: but you refuse to proceed. So again, your argument is worthless. You keep saying "It's possible for this to happen" but not saying HOW it's possible.
I don't believe you. It's not possible.
I stand by what I have previously stated, you are attempting to apply your rules of astronomy (which are all based on a fundamental assumption that the earth is round and not at the center of the universe) to an entirely different system.
What rules do you suggest I use, if not the ones that describe the universe is almost unbelivably successful detail?
Every major astronomical study from which you base your "knowledge" has worked under the assumption that the earth is round since around the 3rd century BC. Were the earth flat these theories would mean absolutely nothing. To apply your astronomical rules to an earth where entirely different astronomical rules would have to be formulated and then be shocked when they don't fit in the new system is ridiculous. Of course they don't fit in a flat earth system because ever astronomical study for over 2000 years has been conducted under the assumption that the earth is round and therefore the findings of such studies all stem from this assumption. Were the assumption in every astronomical study that the earth were flat then the findings would be entirely different.
Once again, you just throw science away. On what basis can we make a decision? To throw science away you have to explain how it can SEEM to work so amazingly well, if in fact it's wrong. If you can't then there is absolutely no reason to throw it away. Unless of course, living on a monkey's asscheek is your idea of a solid theory.
If you do not believe this then it is simply another symptom of your naivety concerning the objective nature of science, however an example comes from science itself which proves the point that the assumptions made by the scientific observer drastically alter the findings of the study - the debate over whether light travels in a wave or as particles. Here depending on the way in which experiments were set up it could be proven that light travelled in a wave in one experiment, yet proven that light travelled as particles in another experiment - despite it previously being "proven" that light travels as a wave. As this example shows (and I urge you to read more about this debate if you haven't already because I have only touched on it) the assumptions of a scientist (or in this case astronomer) are of huge influence to the eventual findings - even if this inquiry is carried out with the most objective of intentions. As such, it would be utterly impossible for the astronomical rules devised under the assumption that the earth is round to fit perfectly in a system where the earth is flat, only someone who naively believes that scientific enquiry can be carried out in an objective manner where the assumptions of the scientist have no bearing on the findings could possibly believe this.
Please start condensing your thoughts. You really ramble a lot and it's hard to find your point. Light is thought to act both as particles and waves, and it's perfectly understandable why some people would in the past think one, and another group think another. Science isn't perfect and no one claims that at all points, it can explain everything.
But its track record can only be described as *phenomenal*. My main point here as I've stated a number of times now: if you throw science away, on what basis can we pick a theory? Why are you arguing at ALL if you throw away the best measure of describing reality we have?
You can't ask me for proof the earth is round, then reject it with "Science might be wrong", or "it's a grand conspiracy". If you don't want scientific proof, WHAT OTHER KIND OF PROOF is there? And speaking of proof: WHERE IS YOURS?