you can't make any conclusions as to why it's as far as you can see.
What rubbish is this? If you don't form conclusions from a
set of observations you ain't doing science, you're just wanking off. If you are getting at some juvenile metaphysical attack on the Principle of Induction, there are better ways to go about it.
Even limiting to personal experience, I have:
a) seen the horizon effect (i.e. the bottom of the ship occluded before the top), at magnification, on 3 continents, in both hemispheres, in all directions.
b) observed the left-right curvature of the horizon from 10km in the air, again in all directions.
c) observed and recorded the circular paths of stars centered on Polaris in the North and Sigma Octanis in the South.
d) observed that stars (you know, the little bright things that hang way above us?) disappear over the horizon as you move North to South and vice-versa, at a rate relative to speed.
The least and most robust explanation is that we live on a rotating, curved surface.
And you come here talking about table-tops? You've got it the wrong way round, kids. Observations first,
then a hypothesis that covers
all facts, doesn't contradict any, and can make new predictions.
You must be able to explain
each and every observation within the framework of one hypothesis. Posulating individual explanations for individual observations is just wanking off.