Right...so what's the flaw you keep talking about, then?
I don't know what you're talking about.
The only flaws I've mentioned are applying observations which would rely upon a RE, to a FE model. I don't think I ever said Eratosphenes was flawed.
Anything is possible. It's possible all problems with knowledge would be solved by thinking that the earth is shaped like a teddy bear. Possible doesn't mean true, or more likely.
No: it means worth examining. That's what science is; examining the possibilities.
The fundamental forces have nothing to do with extraterrestial bodies. They might relate in some vague way to cosmology, but they're all tested on the earth. I'm not familiar with spectroscopy. Quantum mechanics is all tested on earth.
Again, not every chain of implication is direct. The vast majority of science is built on the backs of other areas of science: there has only to be a flaw or oversight in some old topic, and eveyrthing since then may itself be damaged.
Further, 'all tested on the Earth' demonstrates much of the problem: the Earth is not a universal setting. Observations often vary depending on location: measure gravity down a valley, up a mountain, at a pole, at the equator... Some property of the Earth might well interfere with those measurements: the properties of a flat or round Earth would be different.
Again, this is speculation, certainly. The point is only as I've said.
What science? And what problems? Something being incomplete isn't an error. An error when comparing predictions of theory to data implies that something in all of the knowledge used is wrong. Which, in the case of modern sciences, is quite a lot of things.
No, but I am not saying A implies B, I'm saying that B would imply A, and A is the case, so B is possible.
Incompleteness could have two sources. A flawed basis, or mere lack of knowledge. It is only scientific to examine the former option.
If there was a difference between the predictions of ideas related to the birth of the universe and what was observed, this would mean that any number of the millions of different ideas which have been tested to various degrees throughout the ages is wrong, to some extent. It would not mean that a particular 1 of the millions was wrong and the rest were right.
Exactly: a knock-on effect. If something we knew changed, just one thing, that would follow all theories resulting from that, and leading up to that, should be re-examined.
In any case, I don't recall you pointing out any errors.
No. 'Error' is highly subjective: there are always going to be possible explanations. Besides, this is my introductory thread. I'm introducing who I am, what I'm here for, my motives, and how I think: not getting into detailed discourse on various intricacies.