we see the contrails trailing down over the horizon.
How is this possible on a FE?
Perspective. We see tall telephones trailing down to the horizon in much the same way.
According to Rowbotham's own laws of perspective (well, the first one at least, before he contradicted himself) those contrails would disappear before they reached the horizon line. It's simple enough if you think about it: the contrail is much narrower than it is high, so for it's distance above the horizon to be reduced to 1 minute of arc from the viewer's perspective, it's width would have long since fallen below this value, and so it would no longer be visible.
This is one of the great failures of FE theory. All FEers cry that you wouldn't be able to see curvature from an airliner, even in RE, yet the main reason for their belief/argument is they can't see curvature from ground level.
The main reason for my belief/argument is that I cannot see the curvature at all. :/
preco, my apologies for derailing onto the rate of curvature, but I think it's a rather interesting point, and as you said...
This is one of the great failures of FE theory. All FEers cry that you wouldn't be able to see curvature from an airliner, even in RE, yet the main reason for their belief/argument is they can't see curvature from ground level.
It is such a small rate of curvature that the only way to detect it is to do things like the Wallace version of the Bedford Level experiment, or my own mountain measuring experiment, or simply observe ships sailing over the horizon (preferably through a high-powered telescope, so that it can be clearly seen that the ship is being progressively obscured, and not just 'blending' with the horizon).