How can the Earth be an infinite plane?

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thefireproofmatch

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #30 on: August 02, 2011, 07:28:20 PM »
As for the gloom and darkness observations, the south pole can get anywhere fro
 0 to 24 hours of light a day, so they just arrived at one of the darker times.
we're expected to throw up our hands and just BELIEVE.

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berny_74

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #31 on: August 02, 2011, 09:00:34 PM »

With Tom, I think it's because Rowbotham made a reference to "endless tundra" in his description of what lies beyond the Ice Wall (although he also says what lies beyond the Ice Wall is anyone's guess).


But Rowbotham never traveled past the equator so how could he make a reference to it?

Berny
Spellchecker doesn't like Rowbotham
To be fair, sometimes what FE'ers say makes so little sense that it's hard to come up with a rebuttal.
Moonlight is good for you.

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New Earth

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #32 on: August 07, 2011, 07:39:13 PM »
I was always a fan of infinite earth theory. Although I firmly believe that our current earth is a sphere, it is a very likely possibility that in some parallel universe, the earth is indeed infinite. In that case infinite earth would have to be on a much higher vibrational frequency. I speculate that there would be no ice wall, just endless paradise continents, it is an extremely desirable place to be.

Take the current flat earth map, all points south are infinite. This where Atlantis and Lemuria would be located, beyond that infinite number of landmasses and oceans, endless paradise.
JJA voted for Pedro

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thefireproofmatch

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #33 on: August 07, 2011, 08:26:18 PM »
Take the current flat earth map, all points south are infinite. This where Atlantis and Lemuria would be located, beyond that infinite number of landmasses and oceans, endless paradise.
Wasn't Atlantis supposed to be in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific Ocean or something like that?
we're expected to throw up our hands and just BELIEVE.

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New Earth

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #34 on: August 07, 2011, 09:05:17 PM »
Yes in Round Earth model Atlantis is in Atlantic and Lemuria is Pacific. In an infinite earth model, Lemuria and Atlantis shifted south.
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Theodolite

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #35 on: August 07, 2011, 09:10:04 PM »
Yes in Round Earth model Atlantis is in Atlantic and Lemuria is Pacific. In an infinite earth model, Lemuria and Atlantis shifted south.

Could you please explain the research that was conducted, which confirmed this as a model, as opposed to a fiction?

Who peer reviewed this research?
Gather round my gentle sheep, I have a wonderful spherical story for you

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Puttah

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #36 on: August 09, 2011, 01:35:34 AM »
Ahh, welcome back New Earth.

I see your beliefs are still holding strong. Any new discoveries you've made about infinite Earth paradise that you would like to share with us?
Scepti, this idiocy needs to stop and it needs to stop right now. You are making a mockery of this fine forum with your poor trolling. You are a complete disgrace.

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Mr Pseudonym

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #37 on: August 10, 2011, 05:28:58 AM »
@OP.  One must assume the Earth is an infinite plain as until someone actually manages to find the edge and the results are verified we must assume this land we live on stretches forever.
Why do we fall back to earth? Because our weight pushes us down, no laws, no gravity pulling us. It is the law of intelligence.

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rin112

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #38 on: August 10, 2011, 08:18:13 AM »
@OP.  One must assume the Earth is an infinite plain as until someone actually manages to find the edge and the results are verified we must assume this land we live on stretches forever.
Incorrect. It would be more zetetic (and truthful) to say that if the Earth is flat, then we don't know whether it ends, and if so, where.

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Sense

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #39 on: August 10, 2011, 08:23:46 AM »
@OP.  One must assume the Earth is an infinite plain as until someone actually manages to find the edge and the results are verified we must assume this land we live on stretches forever.
Incorrect. It would be more zetetic (and truthful) to say that if the Earth is flat, then we don't know whether it ends, and if so, where.
It would be more zetetic if you just don't assume anything. We can say we don't know how big is the earth better than saying that we assume something.

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Around And About

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #40 on: August 10, 2011, 08:27:14 AM »
One must assume

Ah yes, the very foundation of Zeteticism.
I'm not black nor a thug, I'm more like god who will bring 7 plagues of flat earth upon your ass.

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Sense

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #41 on: August 10, 2011, 09:38:58 AM »
One must assume

Ah yes, the very foundation of Zeteticism.

As you can see, Around and About explained it better than me xD

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Ozymandiax

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #42 on: August 10, 2011, 03:31:06 PM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

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Harutsedo

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #43 on: August 10, 2011, 03:34:47 PM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

In his model, the Earth is only infinite in two dimensions. It has a fixed height.
Quote from: Tom Bishop
If you don't know, whenever you talk about it you're invoking the supernatural
Quote from: Tom Bishop
Unknown != Magic.

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Sense

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #44 on: August 10, 2011, 04:25:40 PM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

In his model, the Earth is only infinite in two dimensions. It has a fixed height.

True. A plane is infinite (2-dimensional), but two planes can exist without touching each other. Earth would be like a plane, and the stars would be in another plane.

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Ozymandiax

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #45 on: August 11, 2011, 12:45:22 AM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

In his model, the Earth is only infinite in two dimensions. It has a fixed height.

Even if it has 1 fixed dimension, the other 2 are still infinite; therefore there is still an infinite mass, and therefore, volume.

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Sense

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #46 on: August 11, 2011, 02:38:53 AM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

In his model, the Earth is only infinite in two dimensions. It has a fixed height.

Even if it has 1 fixed dimension, the other 2 are still infinite; therefore there is still an infinite mass, and therefore, volume.

A plane is infinite (2-dimensional), but two planes can exist without touching each other. Earth would be like a plane, and the stars would be in another plane.

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Ozymandiax

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #47 on: August 11, 2011, 02:47:22 AM »
maybe I am confused, sorry You are proposing then 2 infinite 2-dimensions planes??

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Puttah

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #48 on: August 11, 2011, 03:24:21 AM »
maybe I am confused, sorry You are proposing then 2 infinite 2-dimensions planes??
No, what he's trying to say is that you can still have a sky even if the Earth is an infinite plane. And it can be infinite in 3 dimensions too...

This doesn't take away from the fact that an infinite Earth needs infinite energy to be accelerated.
Scepti, this idiocy needs to stop and it needs to stop right now. You are making a mockery of this fine forum with your poor trolling. You are a complete disgrace.

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Ozymandiax

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #49 on: August 11, 2011, 04:44:39 AM »
Earth.. this undiscovered thing

We, humans we are infinite, infinitely complex, and all perceptions of infinitude come from our own infinity

Earth can be infinite if our infinite perception lead us to perceive it so. Otherwise all former limitations apply and earth from my point of view cannot be an endless and infinite plane. Even if it is flat.

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Harutsedo

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #50 on: August 11, 2011, 07:44:16 AM »
Earth.. this undiscovered thing

We, humans we are infinite, infinitely complex, and all perceptions of infinitude come from our own infinity

Earth can be infinite if our infinite perception lead us to perceive it so. Otherwise all former limitations apply and earth from my point of view cannot be an endless and infinite plane. Even if it is flat.

That made no sense.
Quote from: Tom Bishop
If you don't know, whenever you talk about it you're invoking the supernatural
Quote from: Tom Bishop
Unknown != Magic.

*

berny_74

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #51 on: August 11, 2011, 08:25:16 AM »
maybe I am confused, sorry You are proposing then 2 infinite 2-dimensions planes??
No, what he's trying to say is that you can still have a sky even if the Earth is an infinite plane. And it can be infinite in 3 dimensions too...

This doesn't take away from the fact that an infinite Earth needs infinite energy to be accelerated.

Don't those who are in the infinite flat plane Earth camp also subscribe to gravity which is similar to what is found on RET.  The term I see thrown around is Gaussian.

Berny
This is getting silly

To be fair, sometimes what FE'ers say makes so little sense that it's hard to come up with a rebuttal.
Moonlight is good for you.

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Harutsedo

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #52 on: August 11, 2011, 08:45:03 AM »
maybe I am confused, sorry You are proposing then 2 infinite 2-dimensions planes??
No, what he's trying to say is that you can still have a sky even if the Earth is an infinite plane. And it can be infinite in 3 dimensions too...

This doesn't take away from the fact that an infinite Earth needs infinite energy to be accelerated.

Don't those who are in the infinite flat plane Earth camp also subscribe to gravity which is similar to what is found on RET.  The term I see thrown around is Gaussian.

Berny
This is getting silly

I do believe so.
Quote from: Tom Bishop
If you don't know, whenever you talk about it you're invoking the supernatural
Quote from: Tom Bishop
Unknown != Magic.

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General Disarray

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #53 on: August 11, 2011, 11:43:57 AM »
Gravity is a requirement for the infinite plane theory, something that is infinite in size must also be infinite in mass, therefore cannot be accelerated.
You don't want to make an enemy of me. I'm very powerful.

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The Knowledge

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #54 on: August 11, 2011, 03:23:29 PM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

This is more a trick of mathematics than common sense. I suggest you look up the Infinite Hotel Paradox to see why you're presenting a logical fallacy.
Watermelon, Rhubarb Rhubarb, no one believes the Earth is Flat, Peas and Carrots,  walla.

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Puttah

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #55 on: August 11, 2011, 06:18:02 PM »
maybe I am confused, sorry You are proposing then 2 infinite 2-dimensions planes??
No, what he's trying to say is that you can still have a sky even if the Earth is an infinite plane. And it can be infinite in 3 dimensions too...

This doesn't take away from the fact that an infinite Earth needs infinite energy to be accelerated.

Don't those who are in the infinite flat plane Earth camp also subscribe to gravity which is similar to what is found on RET.  The term I see thrown around is Gaussian.

Berny
This is getting silly
That's fine. They deviated from the use of pseudo-science for a second to make it work. It still has flaws of its own though. An infinite plane with a finite depth will have a finite gravitational pull at all points along the surface of the plane. It doesn't account for the experimentally verified inconsistencies of the gravitational force on the Earth though.
So this is why John Davis included that the celestial bodies have gravity as well.

Either way, so much for being zetetic. How do they know the Earth is infinite? How do they know celestial bodies are pulling us? And what's also surprising is that the stars (celestial bodies) move around in the sky, but the gravitational differences on the Earth's surface don't.

Meh... that's just an insignificant detail I guess.
Scepti, this idiocy needs to stop and it needs to stop right now. You are making a mockery of this fine forum with your poor trolling. You are a complete disgrace.

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New Earth

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #56 on: August 11, 2011, 10:23:27 PM »
The reason some of you have a problem with infinite acceleration is because you only think in terms of limited human science and what is known to science. I guarantee you that God is not called almighty for nothing, he can create infinite energy or infinite acceleration on infinite earth. As I stated before I believe that our earth is a sphere, however in a parallel universe the earth might be in a form of infinite plain, I believe this to be the case.
JJA voted for Pedro

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Puttah

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #57 on: August 11, 2011, 10:46:50 PM »
The reason some of you have a problem with infinite acceleration is because you only think in terms of limited human science and what is known to science. I guarantee you that God is not called almighty for nothing, he can create infinite energy or infinite acceleration on infinite earth. As I stated before I believe that our earth is a sphere, however in a parallel universe the earth might be in a form of infinite plain, I believe this to be the case.

We're not talking about what could be in another universe/dimension, we're talking about the consequences of the beliefs of some FE'ers that think our Earth is an infinite plane.
Scepti, this idiocy needs to stop and it needs to stop right now. You are making a mockery of this fine forum with your poor trolling. You are a complete disgrace.

?

Theodolite

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #58 on: August 11, 2011, 11:14:06 PM »
The reason some of you have a problem with infinite acceleration is because you only think in terms of limited human science and what is known to science. I guarantee you that God is not called almighty for nothing, he can create infinite energy or infinite acceleration on infinite earth. As I stated before I believe that our earth is a sphere, however in a parallel universe the earth might be in a form of infinite plain, I believe this to be the case.

That was very well written.  God magically made it so is a much more defendable position then the other FE stuff.  The problem is when religious people start using quasi-science to explain things they dont understand
Gather round my gentle sheep, I have a wonderful spherical story for you

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Ozymandiax

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Re: How can the Earth be an infinite plane?
« Reply #59 on: August 12, 2011, 01:04:11 AM »
UHmm, going back to the very start of this thread, "How can the Earth be an infinite plane"

I do not think it can be an infinite plane at all, because as someone as already stated (just to choose one discussion line and not being lost in 10^3 different lines), this would result in the fact that it has infinite mass, and therefore an infinite amount of atoms and an infinite volume.

If earth would have infinite mass, then there should be almost no other thing in the universe but earth. So unless someone states that stars ( which you can see with your eyes at night ) are nothing but bright parts of the infinite earth, (earth becomes maybe a ring after some time as in Ringworld?), or reflections in the atmosphere of the existing ones in the earth plane or so.. you must conclude that above, there are exactly this, stars. And a moon, and other planets and such.... and all this from my point of view is a substantial amount of matter that does not ( most likely ) belongs to Earth.

The only possible approximation I can see to an "infinite" earth is a Dyson sphere, and again, it is not infinite, and I do not think we are inside one.

Anyway, when you start considering the "infinite" outside the pure mathematical thinking, you face a very slippery territory, where you can throw a lot of things into the "infinite" box of anything. Infinite, from a macroscopic point of view, is simply too much for any specific object.

This would lead as well to discuss if the Universe is an object (in which programming language?..ha ha ha :-P), and if it is infinite ( can it be? )

This is more a trick of mathematics than common sense. I suggest you look up the Infinite Hotel Paradox to see why you're presenting a logical fallacy.

UHmm common sense and maths sometimes are just not good friends :-)

Anyway, infinite is always ans slippery thing. I am aware of the Infinite Hotel; I will re-read the thread iin order to review it in this light :-)