But you can't just make up any axiom you'd like. The axioms of logic are known and defined, and don't alter.
No they are not? What are the defined and unaltering axioms of logic then?
Wait,
what? Are you saying that an axiom and deduction I make up on the spot are just as valid as, say, a car cannot be both parked and unparked simultaneously?
Google 'laws of logic.'
There's no extreme skepticism, and that argument bears no similarity to your argument. "All objects with mass fall, therefore if we go out to space and let go of an object, it will fall." That's far closer to your argument. Why would objects in a different situation end up looking the same?
It makes no sense.
True, but that changes nothing?
At no point have I made any claim approaching "The laws of nature are not predictable."
Maybe i am misunderstanding you, but you seem to claim exactly that? That the laws of nature are not the same in different locations? That even if they work in one way at x, they could work in a completely different way at y?
Look at the analogy I used earlier (quoted and bolded).
that earth belongs to the class "planets".
Why?
Because we have an idea about how all these different objects came about in the first place.One that explains pretty well why it makes sense to put Earth in the category of planets. The "before we discovered lenses" argument is a strawman.
It's not a straw man: your argument relies on the fact we haven't observed flat objects. Certainly, they wouldn't exist under RET, but if you're trying to contradict FET then just assuming RET is true is a ridiculous starting point. So, in a reasonable setting for a debate, the fact we haven't observed something doesn't mean they don't exist.
You're just assuming the RE model. That's a terrible argument for the RE model. It's completely circular.
Need to be? No. Our ideas could be wrong. I never said it needs to be so.
Uh, yes you did. If it doesn't need to be so, you don't have an argument.
The whole premise, that because we see spheres form in space the Earth must be a sphere, is ludicrous. If we somehow stood on the Sun, we would see planets form all around us. Should we conclude that the Sun is a planet?
No, because the presence of the Sun alters the environment and when the same natural laws are followed, planets form rather than stars.
But that is not the premise i use, you are making that up. You are contradicting yourself a bit here i think. You can use the laws of nature to argue that we cant conclude that Earth is a star, but i cant use the exact same laws of nature to argue that Earth is a planet?
That doesn't make sense.
WHat exactly am I making up?! Your
exact argument is that the fact we observe spheres means that the Earth must be one. I demonstrated that wasn't true by simple observation. You're the one who's constantly bringing in laws of nature without specifying them, and with no reason or relevance.
There are good arguments. Stop wasting time on utterly terrible ones like that, seriously. The only way it even remotely works is if you presuppose the RE model where there is a connection between Earth and those planets. This is irrelevant in every other situation.
That was my point when i talked about extreme skepticism. Sure, if we throw out all our current theories and label observations that does not fit fabrications of a conspiracy, you have a point.
If we cant argue from a vantage point in current science, how can we argue anything in a scientific way?
So your argument literally is just "Just rely on RET being true."
I'm a REer, and you're being more idiotic than most of the flat earthers on this site. Your argument is utterly circular. Yes, RET has a mountain of evidence behind it, but the fact is FEers don't accept that as should be incredibly obvious, so I have no idea what you're trying to do by relying on conclusions of RET.
I didn't bring up any conspiracy whatsoever. I simply said that to prove RET you cannot just assume RET is true.
If you can prove and demonstrate the existence of a natural law that would prevent a flat surface forming, which seems to be the unstated premise of your argument, then you'll have a case: but if you can do that, you don't need this ludicrous line of assertion.
No, terrible because there is no actual logic anywhere within it. The argument is "See these things in the sky? No, not those stars, not that comet, not that black hole... Yes, those planets, finally. You see those? the Earth is one of them!"
This is backed up by evidence, every object we see in space is a sphere, so why is the Earth a separate entity? It makes sense that objects big enough form a sphere under the influence of gravity, if the earth is flat, but has a large surface area, due to the evidence we see of different sized astrological objects, the Earth will form a sphere under it's own gravitational attraction. Since if FE'ers believe the Earth has a set diameter, and this diameter is bigger than objects we see with our own eyes in space, then how illogical is it to presume it doesn't follow this rule?
Some FEers don't believe every object we see is a sphere, and even if they did
that is still not an argument.
Look, what is so hard to understand about the fact that, to convince anyone who doesn't accept RET, you shouldn't just rely on RET being true? This argument alternates between absurd and circular, and at no point even approaches logic.
Plenty of FEers don't even accept gravity, so I have no idea what you're trying to prove with conclusions from that.
It's entirely possible (at least purely in theory) that a flat world could form, and the subsequent effect on its surroundings would let spheres form: in the same way that a star formed, and so made it possible for planets to form, in RET.
Can you really not see how awful this argument is?!