Then again, theory and practice say otherwise. If the image doesn't contain the ship, one won't bring it back just by making the image bigger. You will also find that telescopes don't revert actual cases of inferior and superior mirages.
And again, this simple, established application of the laws of optics is still not understood by most flat earthers. Maybe another parallel with telescopes and optical paths would be ground-based artillery, where the gunners have to plan a trajectory beyond the visible horizon.
The following is from an article about the WWI "Paris Gun":
The guns emplacement was dug out of the north side of the wooded hill at Chateau Bellevue. Mounted on steel rails, the gun faced Paris. The gun was used to shell Paris at a range of 75 miles. The distance was so great that
the Coriolis effect of the earths curvature affected trajectory of the gun.
Firing at an azimuth of 232º, west by southwest, the gunners had to take into consideration that the shells landed to the right of their target
due to the curvature of the earth. (And bear in mind that these calculations were made nearly a century ago.)
Note also the range difference of 800m due to
the earth's curvature.