Well, basically, we don't know what's outside the Earth, and we don't know what the rim is like. It's perfectly logical (as in, it's consistent with what we know so far) to suppose that there might be a rigid cylindrical "plate" enclosing the Earth. It doesn't defy physics or logic; it just defies geology textbooks.
Erasmus, the fact that you don't know about something doesn't make any assumption about it "logical" And I would have you notice that, until now, you were speaking as if you did knew what it was like.
It does defy logic Erasmus, and i'm sure you can see that, since you could not refute any of my points. There is
nothing that points to the existence of that newly discovered cylindrical plate on FE, there has been
no observations that this plate exists, there is no logical reason to assume that it does, simply because you need it to be there.
Why would it be harder than everything else on the planet? One one side you tell me you don't know what's out there, but then you say you're certain that there is an ice wall. Conflicting information.
It doesn't defy physics or logic; it just defies geology textbooks
This is a very hypocritical statment erasmus, considering you were just now using geology to justify the existence of a phenomenon that defied physics, and now geology is suddently invalid.
There's also no particular reason to believe that such a plate might be too weak to resist the expansive pressure of the rest of the Earth.
Yes Erasmus, there is
logic. Your own FE theory demands it. FE has a core, and it it being pushed at the bottom by that force of yours and at the top by the pressure of atmosphere. The densest material of the planet is therefore at the center, NOT at the edges. Even if all the material originally had the same density(which it proably did) the pressure would have forced matter to compress at the center and form the densest part anyway. And since that force isn't going to stop anytime soon according to you, the dense material will never be given a chance to go around the planet, and stay there for an arbitrary reason. The height of plate tectonics is prety far from that level of density.
It could be made of a different material -- a stronger one with a lower melting point. The ceramic of a coffee cup is certainly not thicker than the entire cup, yet it resists the pressure of the coffee and doesn't melt.
Why would it be made of a different material?
Pressure of the coffe? Are you kidding me? How does that relate to a whole planet? The cup itself is hollow. Flat earth does not have sides holding a center made of 100% liquid material. The interior of the planet is very dense, coffe is not a very dense material. The pressure of coffe on the edges of a cup are almost null. The pressures of whole plate tectonics on the edge of your FE would be anything but insignificant. The plates are solid, coffee is not. They are heavy solids under constant movement, coffee is not. In the case of the planet, there are enourmous pressures involved, not so in the case of a cup of coffee. FE is under constant pressure from up and bottom ect. That anaolgy doesn't even make sense.
As usual, if you insist that everything RE scientists say about the Earth is true, then yes, obviously, the Earth must be round. But if you consider the possibility that some of those things must be false -- that we really don't know, for example, what's beneath Antarctica -- then there's nothing illogical about the proposition that beneath Antarctica is a thousand-mile-thick, thousand-mile deep ring of superhard superconducting carbon crystal with a superhigh melting point.
That getaway statment again. My points and statments do not rely on anything that is not true on FE. Like I said, FE already accepts the existence of earthquakes and plate tectonics, and phenomenons associated with it. So even If I assume that scientists are wrong about eveything, FE theory still makes it's existence impossible.
And if you want to know if there is an object that big and that dense under antartica (illogically away from where dense matter should be) then blast antartica with x-rays and find out. Not knowing about something doesn't make
any assumptions about it valid. There is still logic and common sense.
I don't kow where my brother is:
Assumption: He is on the moon playing cards.= Invalid, because what I know about his nature tells me that it is illogical to expect him to travel unaided through the void of space and survive. The fact that I have no idea where he is doesn't make my illogical assmption more valid.