When I look out my window I can see a flat earth.
When I'm given a picture of a round earth from space... I didn't see that. NASA allegedly did.
First hand evidence > Second hand evidence
Yes, but once again, don't trust your eyes.
You are deceived by:
1. Perspective
2. By what makes sense to your brain
A normal human mind doesn't automatically conclude that the earth is round. Since perspective makes it seem flat, the automatic and natural assumption to make is that "the world is flat"!
But reality is never that simple and expected. It always turns out to be something odd and intriguing, but nothing you would ever guess (though it sometimes seems like we should have been able to).
I am not telling you that you have to trust the NASA images (though, they really do count for a lot). I AM telling you not to trust your eyes. You shouldn't. This is not to say that you shouldn't trust them at ALL. But when better instruments and methods can be employed which are more objective and less easily tricked than your eyes, you should give more weight to them.
In other words the refraction effect needs to adjust itself with regards to the distance the observer is looking across, otherwise the earth would not appear flat. Ridiculous.
Which implies that the Bedford level experiment has always worked every time.
However,
it hasn't. (second paragraph)
(
more)
I believe that
these letters by Alfred Russel Wallace himself should be illuminating.
Anyways. Lets say I performed the Bedford Experiment, and I got results that seemed to indicate that the earth was flat. Guess what? I still wouldn't believe the earth was flat.
Why? Not because I am irrational and unscientific. It would rather assume that I had misinterpreted the data. This is because
when you have a single experiment which contradicts practically ALL the other scientific data, you do not immediately jump to the conclusion that it is ALL the other scientific data which is false.To do so is rash and illogical.