I think your position is illogical

  • 98 Replies
  • 24578 Views
*

ThinkingMan

  • 1830
  • +0/-0
  • Oh, Really?
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #60 on: July 23, 2012, 06:17:18 AM »
The Doppler Effect is a hoax created by the government to create the illusion of a spherical sun and Earth.  Light does not change color as it approaches you or moves away from you.  There is evidence that says the Earth is round, but this is false and taught to us since childhood.  I know for a fact, simply by looking at my window, that light stays the same color regardless of which direction it it traveling.

I'm sorry, I know you guys are having fun with your "illusions," but I have to address this. The Doppler effect has nothing to do with a round of a flat earth. Neither does it just address light. It addresses ANY energy wave. If a given energy source is moving towards you, the frequency goes up (wavelength get's shorter), which is called a redshift. If it moves away, the frequency drops (wavelength gets longer), this is a blueshift. This can happen with sound, light, radar, radiation, particle beams, or even in something as simple as waves in the water, kinetic energy. You can do a test. Go in your bath tub with your rubber ducky. Bob ducky up and down in the water. Move ducky in one direction, while continuing to bob it up and down. The wave in the direction of travel will be closer together (redshift), and the waves in the opposite direction will be farther apart (blueshift). The Doppler effect has NOTHING to do with the shape of the earth. It was first observed here on Earth, given a name, and then it was figured out that you can use it in relation to light and distant objects (such as stars) to figure out if they're moving towards us or away from us, and how fast.

There's another test you can do. This one is also simple. Stand on the side of a busy street with an audio recording device (or just your ears, if you're a zetetic). When fire trucks, police cars, or anything that makes a loud noise goes by, you can hear that the sound appears to be higher pitched and faster tempo when it is coming towards you (redshift), and lower pitch and slower tempo when going away (blueshift).

There's another test. Get in your car, a speed on the freeway. When a cop pulls you over for speeding, first ask him how he measured your speed. Then ask him how fast you were going. Radar and Laser speed-detectors use the redshift of light to measure speeds. Also, enjoy the speeding ticket.
When Tom farts, the special gasses released open a sort of worm hole into the past. There Tom is able to freely discuss with Rowbotham all of his ideas and thoughts.

?

One

  • 35
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #61 on: July 23, 2012, 01:11:43 PM »
The sun looks like it meets the surface of the earth when it sets. It doesn't. Hence, the sunset is an illusion.

That is an opinion, not fact. Many people, including me, do not see the sun meeting the horizon in the way you describe. I see the sun moving closer to the horizon and finally setting behind it. I never once thought the sun is  crashing into Earth. That would be silly.

Tom is a silly person, he's not interested in actually figuring out if what he says is true. He's just a middle-aged internet troll.
I said that they were answered.  I didn't say that they were answered correctly.

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #62 on: July 24, 2012, 07:27:30 AM »
The sun looks like it meets the surface of the earth when it sets. It doesn't. Hence, the sunset is an illusion.

That is an opinion, not fact. Many people, including me, do not see the sun meeting the horizon in the way you describe. I see the sun moving closer to the horizon and finally setting behind it. I never once thought the sun is  crashing into Earth. That would be silly.

You can see the sun behind the horizon?

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #63 on: July 24, 2012, 07:40:19 AM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

?

BoatswainsMate

  • 675
  • +0/-0
  • You just been Tom Bishop'ed
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #64 on: July 24, 2012, 05:15:16 PM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

If you cannot tell that the sun is not crashing into Earth you have pretty bad depth perception.

Anywho, I'm done with you. Im not very found of brick walls with little common sense.

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #65 on: July 24, 2012, 08:49:29 PM »
Bye! Don't let the door hit your ass on the way out.

*

Lord Wilmore

  • Vice President
  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 12086
  • +3/-3
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #66 on: July 24, 2012, 09:23:41 PM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

If you cannot tell that the sun is not crashing into Earth you have pretty bad depth perception.

Anywho, I'm done with you. Im not very found of brick walls with little common sense.


Just FYI, the effect Tom is describing is part of RET. Simply, RET scientists believe that at the moment the Sun appears to touch the ground, it has already gone below the horizon in terms of our 'geometric' line of sight. The discrepancy is explained by the bending of light through the atmosphere, causing the Sun to appear above the horizon when in fact it is 'objectively' (for want of a better word) below it.
"I want truth for truth's sake, not for the applaud or approval of men. I would not reject truth because it is unpopular, nor accept error because it is popular. I should rather be right and stand alone than run with the multitude and be wrong." - C.S. DeFord

*

Moon squirter

  • 1405
  • +0/-0
  • Ding dong!
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #67 on: July 25, 2012, 05:08:43 AM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

Tom, do remind us how the sun can possible "set" on a flat earth, when elementary geometry tells us it will never do this (not without the light bending):

No perceptive theories are needed here.
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 05:10:52 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.

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #68 on: July 25, 2012, 07:42:42 AM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

Tom, do remind us how the sun can possible "set" on a flat earth, when elementary geometry tells us it will never do this (not without the light bending):

No perceptive theories are needed here.

Samuel Birley Rowbotham proved elementary geometry to be wrong. It is an inaccurate representation of reality.

A mathematical model does not account for limits to human perspective. Man cannot see forever into the distance. The vanishing point is a finite distance away, not an infinite distance. Your diagram does not take the vanishing point into account.



Also, a mathematical model does not account for Snell's Law. Light is bent when traveling through thicker mediums. The atmosphere is a fluid. Light will be bent when traveling though thicker mediums, as it is when a straw is placed into a glass of water:



It stands to reason, when the sun is shining through 100 miles of atmosphere straight up overhead it is being shifted at a lesser degree and when it is shining through thousands of miles of atmosphere at its setting. The path of light is deflected to another angle as per Snell's Law and has more time and space over thousands of miles to move from its original position.
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 11:19:47 AM by Tom Bishop »

*

garygreen

  • 598
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #69 on: July 25, 2012, 07:47:07 AM »
Samuel Birley Rowbotham proved elementary geometry to be wrong. It is an inaccurate representation of reality.

http://www.sacred-texts.com/earth/za/za23.htm

Quote from: Rowbotham
IT is now demonstrated that the earth is a plane, and therefore the distance of the sun may be readily and most accurately ascertained by the simplest possible process. The operation is one in plane trigonometry, which admits of no uncertainty and requires no modification or allowance for probable influences.
Also, the people on your websites are specifically framing their claims, not to learn the truth of the matter, but because they want to "debunk" Apollo Hoax claims --

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #70 on: July 25, 2012, 07:51:31 AM »
Trigonometry is not Geometry.

*

ThinkingMan

  • 1830
  • +0/-0
  • Oh, Really?
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #71 on: July 25, 2012, 08:04:34 AM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

Tom, do remind us how the sun can possible "set" on a flat earth, when elementary geometry tells us it will never do this (not without the light bending):

No perceptive theories are needed here.

Samuel Birley Rowbotham proved elementary geometry to be wrong. It is an inaccurate representation of reality.

A mathematical model does not account for limits to human perspective. Man cannot see forever into the distance. The vanishing point is a finite distance away, not an infinite distance. Your diagram does not even take the vanishing point into account.

Physics says no. Physics says light will continue from the point of origin until it meets an object in it's way, in which case it will bounce. Your eyes may be the stopping point for the light, in which case, you will see what ever it is this light came from, because that's it's point of origin. It doesn't matter how far away it is. The eye does not have a distance limit. It has a brightness limit. I can see any distance, as long as there is something bright there for me to see. What you are saying is that it essentially works the other way around. It seems to me that you and Rowbotham think that the eye draws light to it, but can only draw it from so far away. Correct me if I'm wrong. But physics says no.
When Tom farts, the special gasses released open a sort of worm hole into the past. There Tom is able to freely discuss with Rowbotham all of his ideas and thoughts.

*

garygreen

  • 598
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #72 on: July 25, 2012, 08:06:15 AM »
Trigonometry is not Geometry.

Do you actually have an argument for why they're incommensurate, or are you basing it simply on the fact that the words are different?

The two disciplines are directly related.  They are based on the same rules and logic.  If anything, trigonometry is a subset of geometry.  If not, explain how.  Show me where Rowbotham disproves any geometric theorem.

Every trigonometric function can be expressed geometrically.
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 08:22:24 AM by garygreen »
Also, the people on your websites are specifically framing their claims, not to learn the truth of the matter, but because they want to "debunk" Apollo Hoax claims --

?

spaghetti

  • 57
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #73 on: July 25, 2012, 10:42:39 AM »
Considering how air is never thicker than water, regardless of altitude, and that water only bends the straw so much



it would be impossible for light to bend due to some sort of intermediate medium in order to account for the sunrise or sunset

Oh, and by the way:

Bye! Don't let the door hit your ass on the way out.

So is no one going to tell Bishop to refrain from low content posting? As far as I know, this statement contributes nothing to the conversation

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #74 on: July 25, 2012, 11:24:28 AM »
Physics says no. Physics says light will continue from the point of origin until it meets an object in it's way, in which case it will bounce. Your eyes may be the stopping point for the light, in which case, you will see what ever it is this light came from, because that's it's point of origin. It doesn't matter how far away it is. The eye does not have a distance limit. It has a brightness limit. I can see any distance, as long as there is something bright there for me to see. What you are saying is that it essentially works the other way around. It seems to me that you and Rowbotham think that the eye draws light to it, but can only draw it from so far away. Correct me if I'm wrong. But physics says no.

Yes, the eye has a distance limit. Why don't you think you can see people walking around on the streets when you look down from an international flight?

Do you actually have an argument for why they're incommensurate, or are you basing it simply on the fact that the words are different?

The two disciplines are directly related.  They are based on the same rules and logic.  If anything, trigonometry is a subset of geometry.  If not, explain how.  Show me where Rowbotham disproves any geometric theorem.

Every trigonometric function can be expressed geometrically.

I encourage you to look up definitions for the words "Trigonometry" and "Geometry".

Considering how air is never thicker than water, regardless of altitude, and that water only bends the straw so much

http://www.spiritualliving.net/straw%20glass%20smalll.jpg

it would be impossible for light to bend due to some sort of intermediate medium in order to account for the sunrise or sunset

The sun is in space. Air is thicker than space.

Granted that light is refracted less in air than in water -- but if the atmosphere bends the rays of the sun 0.2 of a degree, for example, that diversion in path will increase over distance. Over 14,000 miles, where the sun is in moon squirter's diagram, the sun's actual and refracted location may be so different that the observer does not see the sun at all.
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 11:30:14 AM by Tom Bishop »

*

ThinkingMan

  • 1830
  • +0/-0
  • Oh, Really?
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #75 on: July 25, 2012, 12:23:38 PM »
Physics says no. Physics says light will continue from the point of origin until it meets an object in it's way, in which case it will bounce. Your eyes may be the stopping point for the light, in which case, you will see what ever it is this light came from, because that's it's point of origin. It doesn't matter how far away it is. The eye does not have a distance limit. It has a brightness limit. I can see any distance, as long as there is something bright there for me to see. What you are saying is that it essentially works the other way around. It seems to me that you and Rowbotham think that the eye draws light to it, but can only draw it from so far away. Correct me if I'm wrong. But physics says no.

Yes, the eye has a distance limit. Why don't you think you can see people walking around on the streets when you look down from an international flight?

Because light spreads out over a distance. It's not the eye's fault. There's less light to pick up. If my eye had a zoom lense, I could magnify that light. But I'm not a hawk. And Hawks don't fly at 30,000 feet.

Do you actually have an argument for why they're incommensurate, or are you basing it simply on the fact that the words are different?

The two disciplines are directly related.  They are based on the same rules and logic.  If anything, trigonometry is a subset of geometry.  If not, explain how.  Show me where Rowbotham disproves any geometric theorem.

Every trigonometric function can be expressed geometrically.

I encourage you to look up definitions for the words "Trigonometry" and "Geometry".

Considering how air is never thicker than water, regardless of altitude, and that water only bends the straw so much

http://www.spiritualliving.net/straw%20glass%20smalll.jpg

it would be impossible for light to bend due to some sort of intermediate medium in order to account for the sunrise or sunset

The sun is in space. Air is thicker than space.

Granted that light is refracted less in air than in water -- but if the atmosphere bends the rays of the sun 0.2 of a degree, for example, that diversion in path will increase over distance. Over 14,000 miles, where the sun is in moon squirter's diagram, the sun's actual and refracted location may be so different that the observer does not see the sun at all.
[/quote]

You do realize how very little .2 degrees is right? And how far does the light have to go before being deflected that .2 degrees? A millimeter? A meter? A kilometer? You have to take these things into account. It seems, though, that since you're saying "if," that you don't have a real number, that is just a for instance and you actually have no idea how much the atmosphere deflects light.
When Tom farts, the special gasses released open a sort of worm hole into the past. There Tom is able to freely discuss with Rowbotham all of his ideas and thoughts.

*

garygreen

  • 598
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #76 on: July 25, 2012, 12:41:06 PM »
I encourage you to look up definitions for the words "Trigonometry" and "Geometry".
Ok.

Geometry:
Quote
The branch of mathematics concerned with the properties and relations of points, lines, surfaces, solids, and higher dimensional analogs.
Trigonometry:
Quote
The branch of mathematics dealing with the relations of the sides and angles of triangles and with the relevant functions of any angles.
Geometry is the mathematical treatment of points, lines, and shapes.  Trigonometry is the mathematical treatment of one subset of those shapes, the triangle.  This is because (hold on, this will blow your mind) triangles are constructed using points, lines, etc...the stuff of geometry.


http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Trigonometry.html
Quote
The study of angles and of the angular relationships of planar and three-dimensional figures is known as trigonometry.
  You'll notice that Wolfram has organized trigonometry as a subset of geometry.  It's not separate.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trigonometry
Quote
The field evolved during the third century BC as a branch of geometry used extensively for astronomical studies.
And, again, all of the trigonometric functions can be expressed geometrically.  They're based on the same rules, axioms, theorems, etc.  Trigonometry is a form of geometry.  Saying something does not make it so. 
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 12:44:25 PM by garygreen »
Also, the people on your websites are specifically framing their claims, not to learn the truth of the matter, but because they want to "debunk" Apollo Hoax claims --

*

ThinkingMan

  • 1830
  • +0/-0
  • Oh, Really?
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #77 on: July 25, 2012, 01:46:37 PM »
And, again, all of the trigonometric functions can be expressed geometrically.  They're based on the same rules, axioms, theorems, etc.  Trigonometry is a form of geometry.  Saying something does not make it so. 

This may become my signature.
When Tom farts, the special gasses released open a sort of worm hole into the past. There Tom is able to freely discuss with Rowbotham all of his ideas and thoughts.

*

Moon squirter

  • 1405
  • +0/-0
  • Ding dong!
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #78 on: July 25, 2012, 03:08:33 PM »
Also, in RET the the earth is spinning to cause the sunset. The sun isn't actually setting, as the very word 'sunset' implies. Yet another illusion which contradicts claims that there are none.

Tom, do remind us how the sun can possible "set" on a flat earth, when elementary geometry tells us it will never do this (not without the light bending):

No perceptive theories are needed here.

Samuel Birley Rowbotham proved elementary geometry to be wrong. It is an inaccurate representation of reality.

A mathematical model does not account for limits to human perspective. Man cannot see forever into the distance. The vanishing point is a finite distance away, not an infinite distance. Your diagram does not take the vanishing point into account.



Also, a mathematical model does not account for Snell's Law. Light is bent when traveling through thicker mediums. The atmosphere is a fluid. Light will be bent when traveling though thicker mediums, as it is when a straw is placed into a glass of water:



It stands to reason, when the sun is shining through 100 miles of atmosphere straight up overhead it is being shifted at a lesser degree and when it is shining through thousands of miles of atmosphere at its setting. The path of light is deflected to another angle as per Snell's Law and has more time and space over thousands of miles to move from its original position.

1. My diagram does not need to show a "vanishing point", because it is a depicts a 2D section (verticle intersection) of the earth and heavens.  It is not a 3D projection like your rail tracks.

2. My diagram tells us that the perspective effect on the observer will put the sun at 12 degrees above the horizon at midnight.  Therefore light would need to bent to allow any "setting" on a FE.

3. The limits of human perspective (resolution?) are well capable of observing angular diameters of 12 degrees, which is about 24 sun-disk diameters.  Again, light would need to bent to allow any setting on a FE.

4.  Lastly, Snells law predicts that light rays will be bent downwards by the lower atmosphere, because it is denser. The sun will therefore appear higher, not lower.  This atmospheric effect is already well understood and contributes to extended daylight.

Now do you reject Rowbothem and all his works, and all his shambolic half-baked theories (with no mathematics).
I haven't performed it and I've never claimed to. I've have trouble being in two places at the same time.

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #79 on: July 25, 2012, 03:23:00 PM »
Quote from: ThinkingMan
Because light spreads out over a distance. It's not the eye's fault. There's less light to pick up. If my eye had a zoom lense, I could magnify that light. But I'm not a hawk. And Hawks don't fly at 30,000 feet.

So you agree that eyes have limits then. Thanks

Quote from: ThinkingMan
You do realize how very little .2 degrees is right? And how far does the light have to go before being deflected that .2 degrees? A millimeter? A meter? A kilometer? You have to take these things into account. It seems, though, that since you're saying "if," that you don't have a real number, that is just a for instance and you actually have no idea how much the atmosphere deflects light.

The point was to illustrate that very small numbers can have large results. If the atmosphere deflects light 0.2 degrees at point A, then the modified path would be a great distance over 14,000 miles at point B, despite 0.2 degrees being a rather small number.

How large would the rim of 0.2 degrees of a pie chart be, if the pie chart had a radius of 14,000 miles?
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 03:25:04 PM by Tom Bishop »

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #80 on: July 25, 2012, 03:25:45 PM »
I encourage you to look up definitions for the words "Trigonometry" and "Geometry".
Ok.

Geometry:
Quote
The branch of mathematics concerned with the properties and relations of points, lines, surfaces, solids, and higher dimensional analogs.
Trigonometry:
Quote
The branch of mathematics dealing with the relations of the sides and angles of triangles and with the relevant functions of any angles.

They look like different definitions to me.

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #81 on: July 25, 2012, 03:35:12 PM »
1. My diagram does not need to show a "vanishing point", because it is a depicts a 2D section (verticle intersection) of the earth and heavens.  It is not a 3D projection like your rail tracks.

As your diagram does not take the vanishing point into consideration, it is a bunk representation of reality.

Quote
2. My diagram tells us that the perspective effect on the observer will put the sun at 12 degrees above the horizon at midnight.  Therefore light would need to bent to allow any "setting" on a FE.

Your representation does not account for Snell's Law.

Quote
3. The limits of human perspective (resolution?) are well capable of observing angular diameters of 12 degrees, which is about 24 sun-disk diameters.  Again, light would need to bent to allow any setting on a FE.

The limits of human perspective are not related to whether the sun can or cannot be seen in the sky, but how soon the perspective lines merge. They do not merge an infinite distance away as oft depicted in art school.

Quote
4.  Lastly, Snells law predicts that light rays will be bent downwards by the lower atmosphere, because it is denser. The sun will therefore appear higher, not lower.  This atmospheric effect is already well understood and contributes to extended daylight.

Snells Law bends the light downwards, hence the light would appear to set into the ground, when in reality it has not.

?

spaghetti

  • 57
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #82 on: July 25, 2012, 04:46:39 PM »
Quote from: ThinkingMan
You do realize how very little .2 degrees is right? And how far does the light have to go before being deflected that .2 degrees? A millimeter? A meter? A kilometer? You have to take these things into account. It seems, though, that since you're saying "if," that you don't have a real number, that is just a for instance and you actually have no idea how much the atmosphere deflects light.

The point was to illustrate that very small numbers can have large results. If the atmosphere deflects light 0.2 degrees at point A, then the modified path would be a great distance over 14,000 miles at point B, despite 0.2 degrees being a rather small number.

How large would the rim of 0.2 degrees of a pie chart be, if the pie chart had a radius of 14,000 miles?

Let's pretend that it is a 0.2 degree difference. The atmosphere is approximately 11 miles (the number may be off because there is no real boundary), but let's say it was 20 miles. If I had a circle with a radius of 20 miles, and I examined a 0.2 degree slice, the arc length would be 0.07 miles. That's 112 meters! This could not account for the sunrise or sunset in any way.

Snells Law bends the light downwards, hence the light would appear to set into the ground, when in reality it has not.

I don't think you understand how snells law works. When light hits a surface, you can draw two things from this point; a tangent to the surface, and a normal, which would be parallel to the tangent. When light is moving from one medium to a denser one, the angle between the path of the ray of light and the normal decreases. In other words, if a ray of light hit the surface of the atmosphere, it would bend towards the ground, and not up from it, causing it to seem more above us than it actually is.



In that picture, the right side is the denser medium. If you rotate it 90 degrees, so that the left becomes the top, the you'll see why your argument makes no sense
« Last Edit: July 25, 2012, 04:56:16 PM by spaghetti »

*

Moon squirter

  • 1405
  • +0/-0
  • Ding dong!
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #83 on: July 26, 2012, 12:09:00 AM »
1. My diagram does not need to show a "vanishing point", because it is a depicts a 2D section (verticle intersection) of the earth and heavens.  It is not a 3D projection like your rail tracks.

As your diagram does not take the vanishing point into consideration, it is a bunk representation of reality.

Quote
2. My diagram tells us that the perspective effect on the observer will put the sun at 12 degrees above the horizon at midnight.  Therefore light would need to bent to allow any "setting" on a FE.

Your representation does not account for Snell's Law.

Quote
3. The limits of human perspective (resolution?) are well capable of observing angular diameters of 12 degrees, which is about 24 sun-disk diameters.  Again, light would need to bent to allow any setting on a FE.

The limits of human perspective are not related to whether the sun can or cannot be seen in the sky, but how soon the perspective lines merge. They do not merge an infinite distance away as oft depicted in art school.

Quote
4.  Lastly, Snells law predicts that light rays will be bent downwards by the lower atmosphere, because it is denser. The sun will therefore appear higher, not lower.  This atmospheric effect is already well understood and contributes to extended daylight.

Snells Law bends the light downwards, hence the light would appear to set into the ground, when in reality it has not.

1.  OK, you're effectively saying that when something is drawn to scale, the angles change.  I don't think that type of idiotic reasoning requires any further attention.  I will leaving you in your own reality on this one.

2.  If my diagram did take Snells law into account, the angle would be greater than 12 degrees (see point 4~)

3.  Perspective lines are not applicable to a 2D scale diagram.  See point 1 above regarding idiocy.

4.  Snell's law will cause sunlight rays to enter the eye at a steeper angle.  You cannot see light rays hitting the ground. I think you had this conversation a few years ago, and you still don't get it.  It's not my fault if your brain cannot comprehend that light must enter the eye to be detected.

You appear to be wrong on every point.  It may be ego, idiocy or trolling.  I cannot decide which.
I haven't performed it and I've never claimed to. I've have trouble being in two places at the same time.

*

ThinkingMan

  • 1830
  • +0/-0
  • Oh, Really?
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #84 on: July 26, 2012, 05:47:42 AM »
Quote from: ThinkingMan
Because light spreads out over a distance. It's not the eye's fault. There's less light to pick up. If my eye had a zoom lense, I could magnify that light. But I'm not a hawk. And Hawks don't fly at 30,000 feet.

So you agree that eyes have limits then. Thanks

If you perhaps read the whole thing, you would realize that the limit is not related to distance, it's related to how wide the pupil is and how much light can get it. Which has nothing to do with distance. It's a limit on light through a medium. Not a limit on the eye being able to see. I can see the light reflecting off of individual windows on an airliner if the angle is right. I can also see a jet-fighter at high altitude, and a satellite go by, which is very far, and satellites are generally no bigger than a  motorbike, or perhaps a golf cart.
When Tom farts, the special gasses released open a sort of worm hole into the past. There Tom is able to freely discuss with Rowbotham all of his ideas and thoughts.

*

garygreen

  • 598
  • +0/-0
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #85 on: July 26, 2012, 10:00:54 AM »
I encourage you to look up definitions for the words "Trigonometry" and "Geometry".
Ok.

Geometry:
Quote
The branch of mathematics concerned with the properties and relations of points, lines, surfaces, solids, and higher dimensional analogs.
Trigonometry:
Quote
The branch of mathematics dealing with the relations of the sides and angles of triangles and with the relevant functions of any angles.

They look like different definitions to me.

Geometry is concerned with the properties and relations of points, lines, surfaces, and solids.  Trigonometry is concerned with the properties of triangles.  Triangles are a kind of shape.  They are constructed using points, lines, and surfaces.  How is this so difficult for you?

Also, please show me where Rowbotham proves plane geometry to be wrong (whatever that means).  You have yet to do this.  I'm sure an expert such as yourself should have no trouble pointing me to a passage.  I've read most of ENaG, and I searched the text using various keywords (geometry, trigonometry, proof, etc.) and found nothing of the sort.

Perhaps you could also tell me what foundations of geometry you think are wrong.  You know, instead of just repeating simple sentences like a child.

Also, the people on your websites are specifically framing their claims, not to learn the truth of the matter, but because they want to "debunk" Apollo Hoax claims --

*

markjo

  • Content Nazi
  • 45115
  • +87/-130
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #86 on: July 26, 2012, 08:03:48 PM »
Rather than having an unnecessary debate about geometry vs. trigonometry, why don't we just skip to the part where we all agree that Moon squirter should have said "trigonometry" instead of "geometry".
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.
Quote from: Robosteve
Besides, perhaps FET is a conspiracy too.
Quote from: bullhorn
It is just the way it is, you understanding it doesn't concern me.

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #87 on: July 26, 2012, 09:07:50 PM »
Quote from: ThinkingMan
You do realize how very little .2 degrees is right? And how far does the light have to go before being deflected that .2 degrees? A millimeter? A meter? A kilometer? You have to take these things into account. It seems, though, that since you're saying "if," that you don't have a real number, that is just a for instance and you actually have no idea how much the atmosphere deflects light.

The point was to illustrate that very small numbers can have large results. If the atmosphere deflects light 0.2 degrees at point A, then the modified path would be a great distance over 14,000 miles at point B, despite 0.2 degrees being a rather small number.

How large would the rim of 0.2 degrees of a pie chart be, if the pie chart had a radius of 14,000 miles?

Let's pretend that it is a 0.2 degree difference. The atmosphere is approximately 11 miles (the number may be off because there is no real boundary), but let's say it was 20 miles. If I had a circle with a radius of 20 miles, and I examined a 0.2 degree slice, the arc length would be 0.07 miles. That's 112 meters! This could not account for the sunrise or sunset in any way.

Snells Law bends the light downwards, hence the light would appear to set into the ground, when in reality it has not.

I don't think you understand how snells law works. When light hits a surface, you can draw two things from this point; a tangent to the surface, and a normal, which would be parallel to the tangent. When light is moving from one medium to a denser one, the angle between the path of the ray of light and the normal decreases. In other words, if a ray of light hit the surface of the atmosphere, it would bend towards the ground, and not up from it, causing it to seem more above us than it actually is.



In that picture, the right side is the denser medium. If you rotate it 90 degrees, so that the left becomes the top, the you'll see why your argument makes no sense

Why are we flipping the diagram 90 degrees so that the left becomes the top? The sun's rays are coming in from the side during its setting. If the rays followed the path in your diagram, from left to right, they would appear to the observer that the sun was coming in closer to the ground than it really was.

Added some illustrations to the diagram:



Took away the upper right quadrant since we don't live in a column of air:

« Last Edit: July 26, 2012, 09:56:20 PM by Tom Bishop »

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #88 on: July 26, 2012, 09:12:23 PM »
Quote from: moonsquirter
1.  OK, you're effectively saying that when something is drawn to scale, the angles change.  I don't think that type of idiotic reasoning requires any further attention.  I will leaving you in your own reality on this one.

Consider that the lands aascend to the eye level of the observer as they recede into the distance. Consider that when a flock of birds flies into the distance it will appear to descend into the horizon. Your diagram does not account for that at all.

Quote
2.  If my diagram did take Snells law into account, the angle would be greater than 12 degrees (see point 4~)

As your diagram is a geometric mathematical model which does not take perspective or real world conditions into account, it is false. We live in reality, not some mathematical model.

Quote
3.  Perspective lines are not applicable to a 2D scale diagram.  See point 1 above regarding idiocy.

We do not live in a 2d scale diagram.

Quote
4.  Snell's law will cause sunlight rays to enter the eye at a steeper angle.  You cannot see light rays hitting the ground. I think you had this conversation a few years ago, and you still don't get it.  It's not my fault if your brain cannot comprehend that light must enter the eye to be detected.

Snell's law would cause the sun to appear to be lower than it actually is. See my post above.
« Last Edit: July 26, 2012, 09:18:00 PM by Tom Bishop »

*

Tom Bishop

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 18033
  • +6/-9
Re: I think your position is illogical
« Reply #89 on: July 26, 2012, 09:13:12 PM »
Quote from: ThinkingMan
Because light spreads out over a distance. It's not the eye's fault. There's less light to pick up. If my eye had a zoom lense, I could magnify that light. But I'm not a hawk. And Hawks don't fly at 30,000 feet.

So you agree that eyes have limits then. Thanks

If you perhaps read the whole thing, you would realize that the limit is not related to distance, it's related to how wide the pupil is and how much light can get it. Which has nothing to do with distance. It's a limit on light through a medium. Not a limit on the eye being able to see. I can see the light reflecting off of individual windows on an airliner if the angle is right. I can also see a jet-fighter at high altitude, and a satellite go by, which is very far, and satellites are generally no bigger than a  motorbike, or perhaps a golf cart.

So I see that you again agree that the eyes have limits.