I'm new and have some questions

  • 34 Replies
  • 9539 Views
?

FlimFloom

  • 2
  • +0/-0
I'm new and have some questions
« on: June 12, 2016, 04:25:25 AM »
Ok so I'm pretty new, and I just have a few questions (take note I am not trying to disprove the FE society, just curious).

Ok, so from what Im aware is that gravity isnt aware and we're accelerating upward etc, my question is can we drill through the Earth is it thin thick etc, and is it rotating, as well as is the Earth rotating around the Sun or Sun around the Earth?

Why is there different timezones and night one place meanwhile day somewhere else?

Why is it when theres an eclipse we can see the round Earth against the Moon or whatever it is.

How does circumnavigation work and what happens if we begin in the center of disk will you sail in circles?

Thanks for your time.

*

Space Cowgirl

  • MOM
  • Planar Moderator
  • 52404
  • +100/-95
  • Official FE Recruiter
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #1 on: June 12, 2016, 09:44:57 AM »
Ok so I'm pretty new, and I just have a few questions (take note I am not trying to disprove the FE society, just curious).
HI!

Quote
Ok, so from what Im aware is that gravity isnt aware and we're accelerating upward etc, my question is can we drill through the Earth is it thin thick etc, and is it rotating, as well as is the Earth rotating around the Sun or Sun around the Earth?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kola_Superdeep_Borehole  Maybe someday they will punch through to the other side, but I do not think we have the technology to do it yet.

The flat earth is not rotating around the sun, the sun takes a circular path over the flat earth.

Quote
Why is there different timezones and night one place meanwhile day somewhere else?
There are simulations of how the sun travels around over the flat earth in the FAQ.

Quote
Why is it when theres an eclipse we can see the round Earth against the Moon or whatever it is.

I'm not sure I understand the question.

Quote
How does circumnavigation work and what happens if we begin in the center of disk will you sail in circles?
Yes!

Quote
Thanks for your time.

You're welcome  :)
I'm sorry. Am I to understand that when you have a boner you like to imagine punching the shit out of Tom Bishop? That's disgusting.

*

Bom Tishop

  • 11250
  • +12/-7
  • Official friend boy of the FES!!
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #2 on: June 12, 2016, 10:44:28 AM »
You should feel honored space cow girl emerged from the lower fora to reply to such a question.
Quote from: Bom Tishop
LordDave is quite alright even for a bleeding heart liberal. Godspeed good sir

*

Space Cowgirl

  • MOM
  • Planar Moderator
  • 52404
  • +100/-95
  • Official FE Recruiter
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #3 on: June 12, 2016, 10:52:14 AM »
You should feel honored space cow girl emerged from the lower fora to reply to such a question.

I would post up here more if you guys didn't turn all the threads into poop fires!
I'm sorry. Am I to understand that when you have a boner you like to imagine punching the shit out of Tom Bishop? That's disgusting.

Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #4 on: June 12, 2016, 10:57:05 AM »
You shills are terrible!!   Who sent you??  Whoever sent you is terrible too.  Sheesh. 

You reveal your cards without even realizing it. 

Ok, so from what Im aware is that gravity isnt aware and we're accelerating upward etc, my question is can we drill through the Earth is it thin thick etc, and is it rotating, as well as is the Earth rotating around the Sun or Sun around the Earth?

!!SNIP!!

Thanks for your time.
Sorry but I have spent a lot of time trying to understand what you so eagerly want to know and I can not figure it out. 


*

Bom Tishop

  • 11250
  • +12/-7
  • Official friend boy of the FES!!
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #5 on: June 12, 2016, 11:10:18 AM »
You should feel honored space cow girl emerged from the lower fora to reply to such a question.

I would post up here more if you guys didn't turn all the threads into poop fires!

Hey I try to make good threads and comments. If there was just a team of people who could boot or control the trouble makers. I have seen them on other forums, usually go by "mods" or "admins", something along those lines. They are a mythological unicorn here  :D

You shills are terrible!!   Who sent you??  Whoever sent you is terrible too.  Sheesh. 

You reveal your cards without even realizing it. 

Ok, so from what Im aware is that gravity isnt aware and we're accelerating upward etc, my question is can we drill through the Earth is it thin thick etc, and is it rotating, as well as is the Earth rotating around the Sun or Sun around the Earth?

!!SNIP!!

Thanks for your time.
Sorry but I have spent a lot of time trying to understand what you so eagerly want to know and I can not figure it out. 



Is this better space cowgirl? This dribble is from one of your own....something is not understood or an actual argument is presented the term shill is an automated retort. (I am not speaking about flimfloom, as I haven't read or followed is post really)
Quote from: Bom Tishop
LordDave is quite alright even for a bleeding heart liberal. Godspeed good sir

*

Space Cowgirl

  • MOM
  • Planar Moderator
  • 52404
  • +100/-95
  • Official FE Recruiter
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #6 on: June 12, 2016, 11:27:32 AM »
Babyhighspeed, GOSH.

You realize that everyone who joins here and starts flinging poo isn't on my side just because they say they're FE? People who call others shills all the time are on their own side! They just want to make you defend yourself, instead of your ideas. You guys play their game (innocently, imo) and this turns the threads to poop fires.

People come here to troll all of us, not just the FE. They are probably PENGUINS  >:(

Anyway, this is the Q&A forum, not the debate forum. If I see someone has asked a question or two, I try to answer. If they make a post with too many questions (I'm sure you've seen some of those) I just skip it. I don't try to argue with anyone or change their mind here... usually, I may have misbehaved in this forum in the past (I've been here a long time!).
I'm sorry. Am I to understand that when you have a boner you like to imagine punching the shit out of Tom Bishop? That's disgusting.

*

Bom Tishop

  • 11250
  • +12/-7
  • Official friend boy of the FES!!
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #7 on: June 12, 2016, 11:34:13 AM »
Babyhighspeed, GOSH.

You realize that everyone who joins here and starts flinging poo isn't on my side just because they say they're FE? People who call others shills all the time are on their own side! They just want to make you defend yourself, instead of your ideas. You guys play their game (innocently, imo) and this turns the threads to poop fires.

People come here to troll all of us, not just the FE. They are probably PENGUINS  >:(

Anyway, this is the Q&A forum, not the debate forum. If I see someone has asked a question or two, I try to answer. If they make a post with too many questions (I'm sure you've seen some of those) I just skip it. I don't try to argue with anyone or change their mind here... usually, I may have misbehaved in this forum in the past (I've been here a long time!).

I can't even imagine you mis misbehaving, you are always so calm and reserved. I have a feeling GOSH was a toned down word compared to what originally came to mind ha ha ;D

Still gonna make you queso(true authenticate Tex Mex queso not markjo man cheese) and may even add some garlic parmesan chicken for the meat of some soft tacos.

Though I still want my cookies >:(

I digress, as I know you don't like thread derailments
Quote from: Bom Tishop
LordDave is quite alright even for a bleeding heart liberal. Godspeed good sir

*

disputeone

  • 28122
  • +116/-118
  • Or should I?
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #8 on: June 12, 2016, 08:29:13 PM »
Ok so I'm pretty new, and I just have a few questions (take note I am not trying to disprove the FE society, just curious).

So you're Flat Curious?

Quote
Ok, so from what Im aware is that gravity isnt aware and we're accelerating upward etc, my question is can we drill through the Earth is it thin thick etc, and is it rotating, as well as is the Earth rotating around the Sun or Sun around the Earth?

UA is a bogus theory IMO, even the flat earthers think it's silly.

Quote
Why is there different timezones and night one place meanwhile day somewhere else?

Apparently the sun is much closer and smaller, it behaves like a spotlight.

It travels around different circles to create seasons and day / night cycles.

Quote
Why is it when theres an eclipse we can see the round Earth against the Moon or whatever it is.

Simplist explanation is that the earths round, otherwise you need an "anti-moon"

Quote
How does circumnavigation work and what happens if we begin in the center of disk will you sail in circles?

Not like it works on a globe.

Apparently that is the case in a hemispheric circumnavigation.

Quote
Thanks for your time.

Its ok.

SCG join the round side. We have better arguments and I make a really nice Pavlova.
« Last Edit: June 12, 2016, 08:56:39 PM by disputeone »
Why would that be inciting terrorism?  Lorddave was merely describing a type of shop we have here in the US, a bomb-gun shop.  A shop that sells bomb-guns.

*

Space Cowgirl

  • MOM
  • Planar Moderator
  • 52404
  • +100/-95
  • Official FE Recruiter
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #9 on: June 13, 2016, 06:56:25 AM »
Once you go flat you never go back!
I'm sorry. Am I to understand that when you have a boner you like to imagine punching the shit out of Tom Bishop? That's disgusting.

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #10 on: June 13, 2016, 10:40:55 AM »
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #11 on: June 15, 2016, 12:41:59 PM »
Once you go flat you never go back!

It is precisely this refusal to critically examine and evaluate ALL evidence, not just that which fits our particular set of ideas, that allows nonsensical ideas to persist.  Just ask an anti-vaxxer.

If the numbers don't add up how you like, mathematics isn't to blame.  It's because the numbers you used were wrong.

If we calculate the masses, distances and speeds of the various heavenly bodies and end up with a model which accurately predicts... basically everything, why would you assume it is entirely false?  When was the last SURPRISE eclipse?  One that FE theory predicted, but RE theory missed?  Is there one measurement anyone can make that is inconsistent with a spherical earth?  Just one?

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #12 on: June 15, 2016, 12:47:18 PM »
I'd love to know when there was an eclipse that couldn't be predicted using FE methods, if you'd like to stand up to your own scrutiny.

The level nature of water is inconsistent with a spherical earth.  Or how about the rotational velocities of certain galaxies? So inconsistent with a spherical earth universe that they had to invent 97% to explain this and expansion. Woooh boy. That's a lot of the universe to know nothing about while still trying to claim you know anything about the universe.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #13 on: June 15, 2016, 01:07:37 PM »
I'd love to know when there was an eclipse that couldn't be predicted using FE methods, if you'd like to stand up to your own scrutiny.

The level nature of water is inconsistent with a spherical earth.  Or how about the rotational velocities of certain galaxies? So inconsistent with a spherical earth universe that they had to invent 97% to explain this and expansion. Woooh boy. That's a lot of the universe to know nothing about while still trying to claim you know anything about the universe.

We know how to predict eclipses because we know the relative size, velocity and distances of the sun and moon relative to the earth.  Explain to me how FE eclipses happen, please.  The geometry of them, and the relative size and position of the moving parts. 

Water ISN'T perfectly level.  It looks that way because a human observer is incredibly small compared to the Earth.  We cannot see the curvature terribly well that close up.  If you took the perspective of a speck of dust on a bowling ball, the local area of the ball occupied by the speck would look pretty flat to the speck.

Numbers:  Earth has a mass of about 5972000000000000000000000 kilograms.  I weigh about 60 kg.  This means Earth is about 10000000000000000000000 times larger than me, to get an idea of the scale involved.  The fraction of the Earth we can observe with our eyes at any one time is such a small portion of the whole that it looks flat to us locally, despite the fact that it is not.

I also fail to see how the rotation of a galaxy could be inconsistent with, or even relevant to, the shape of the Earth.  Something about physics?  Perhaps I am missing something important, and I would like to hear you out on the subject.

And you're suggesting 97% of what, exactly, is made up?  And on what grounds?  I do not understand this.  But there are many things I do not understand, so this not that unusual.

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #14 on: June 15, 2016, 01:11:42 PM »
The round earth universe relies on dark matter and dark energy taking up 97% of the universe in spite of being unable to be falsified or detected. Its the equivalent of Newton saying his Universe was held together by God.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #15 on: June 15, 2016, 01:37:40 PM »
The round earth universe relies on dark matter and dark energy taking up 97% of the universe in spite of being unable to be falsified or detected. Its the equivalent of Newton saying his Universe was held together by God.

I don't know where you are getting the 97% figure.  Published data suggest the number is more like 25% - https://arxiv.org/pdf/1303.5062v2.pdf

And we CAN detect dark matter, albeit indirectly.  It's hard to study something that doesn't interact with ordinary matter, but we are learning how!

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #16 on: June 15, 2016, 01:58:32 PM »
I can detect leprechauns indirectly too. They mess with the outer rotational velocities of large galaxies. Its hard to study them too, because they are invisible, but I'm learning how. I'm pretty sure they give off high-energy neutrinos. Mostly because they seem wimpy.  I've already contacted researchers working with AMANDA and am glad to hear they are well underway to discovering proof of my leprechaun.


I find keeping a lot of clovers near by helps me come up with ridiculous ad hoc hypotheses that I sell to the public as fact.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #17 on: June 15, 2016, 02:04:03 PM »
And yes, there are a lot of different values published for how much dark matter there is. Its different in each study I read. This speaks to its legitimacy.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

*

disputeone

  • 28122
  • +116/-118
  • Or should I?
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #18 on: June 15, 2016, 02:17:22 PM »
If you need to call dark matter / energy "leprechauns" to accept it it's fine by me.

Quote
It turns out that roughly 68% of the Universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the Universe.Jun 5, 2015
Dark Energy, Dark Matter - NASA Science

Just to clear things up.
« Last Edit: June 15, 2016, 02:19:04 PM by disputeone »
Why would that be inciting terrorism?  Lorddave was merely describing a type of shop we have here in the US, a bomb-gun shop.  A shop that sells bomb-guns.

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #19 on: June 15, 2016, 04:27:56 PM »
If you need to call dark matter / energy "leprechauns" to accept it it's fine by me.

Quote
It turns out that roughly 68% of the Universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the Universe.Jun 5, 2015
Dark Energy, Dark Matter - NASA Science

Just to clear things up.
It really should bother you that dark matter and leprechauns are inter-changable.

I've seen many published values. Its almost like every time a paper come out it says something different to this value even if thats not the point of the paper.

Now you do bring up something interesting. Look how matter of factly thats stated. "It turns out.."

Not "we suspect" or "our hypothesis is" or "the science leads us to believe" or anything like that. Or even the working knowledge says.

It turns out.

This is a government funded organization paid for by the people that is taking their scientific opinion and throwing it around like its fact. People who can't read, can't think for themselves about the matter logically, and otherwise can't bother to look towards these organizations for their view of the Universe and they are lying to each of them.

They should be ashamed.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

*

Blue_Moon

  • 846
  • +0/-0
  • Defender of NASA
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #20 on: June 15, 2016, 04:44:36 PM »
If you need to call dark matter / energy "leprechauns" to accept it it's fine by me.

Quote
It turns out that roughly 68% of the Universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the Universe.Jun 5, 2015
Dark Energy, Dark Matter - NASA Science

Just to clear things up.
It really should bother you that dark matter and leprechauns are inter-changable.

I've seen many published values. Its almost like every time a paper come out it says something different to this value even if thats not the point of the paper.

Now you do bring up something interesting. Look how matter of factly thats stated. "It turns out.."

Not "we suspect" or "our hypothesis is" or "the science leads us to believe" or anything like that. Or even the working knowledge says.

It turns out.

This is a government funded organization paid for by the people that is taking their scientific opinion and throwing it around like its fact. People who can't read, can't think for themselves about the matter logically, and otherwise can't bother to look towards these organizations for their view of the Universe and they are lying to each of them.

They should be ashamed.

http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~ger/ASTRO-110_sp08/Lecture28_DarkMatter.pdf

It's you who should be ashamed.  You think that throwing around a few stats counts as enough "research"  to declare a topic false. 
Aerospace Engineering Student
NASA Enthusiast
Round Earth Advocate
More qualified to speak for NASA than you are to speak against them

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #21 on: June 15, 2016, 11:22:41 PM »
Still want one measurement of the earth that is inconsistent with a spherical one.

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #22 on: June 16, 2016, 10:17:47 AM »
If you need to call dark matter / energy "leprechauns" to accept it it's fine by me.

Quote
It turns out that roughly 68% of the Universe is dark energy. Dark matter makes up about 27%. The rest - everything on Earth, everything ever observed with all of our instruments, all normal matter - adds up to less than 5% of the Universe.Jun 5, 2015
Dark Energy, Dark Matter - NASA Science

Just to clear things up.
It really should bother you that dark matter and leprechauns are inter-changable.

I've seen many published values. Its almost like every time a paper come out it says something different to this value even if thats not the point of the paper.

Now you do bring up something interesting. Look how matter of factly thats stated. "It turns out.."

Not "we suspect" or "our hypothesis is" or "the science leads us to believe" or anything like that. Or even the working knowledge says.

It turns out.

This is a government funded organization paid for by the people that is taking their scientific opinion and throwing it around like its fact. People who can't read, can't think for themselves about the matter logically, and otherwise can't bother to look towards these organizations for their view of the Universe and they are lying to each of them.

They should be ashamed.

http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~ger/ASTRO-110_sp08/Lecture28_DarkMatter.pdf

It's you who should be ashamed.  You think that throwing around a few stats counts as enough "research"  to declare a topic false.
I'm not the one putting forth a guess as fact of the matter. I don't have to show it false. The burden is on them to show it true - except they don't have that burden because they get to say whatever they want and people gobble it up because they like shows like The Big Bang Theory and MythBusters but don't actually like science itself at all.

Appearing to like science and be smart is 'cool'. Actually being smart and actually liking science is a whole different story.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #23 on: June 16, 2016, 10:18:09 AM »
Still want one measurement of the earth that is inconsistent with a spherical one.
Bedford Level Canal.
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #24 on: June 16, 2016, 10:32:23 AM »
Still want one measurement of the earth that is inconsistent with a spherical one.
Bedford Level Canal.

I'm confused.  That experiment confirms the curvature of the earth.

Per the Wikipedias
Quote
The most famous of the observations, and the one that was taught in schools until photographs of the Earth from space became available, involved a set of three poles fixed at equal height above water level along this length. As the surface of the water was assumed to be level, the discovery that the middle pole, when viewed carefully through a theodolite, was almost three feet (0.91 m) higher than the poles at each end was finally accepted as a new proof that the surface of the earth was indeed curved.

Rejoinder/rebuttal?

*

Username

  • President of The Flat Earth Society
  • Administrator
  • 18223
  • +41/-81
  • Most Accurate Scientist Ever
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #25 on: June 16, 2016, 11:07:05 AM »
Still want one measurement of the earth that is inconsistent with a spherical one.
Bedford Level Canal.

I'm confused.  That experiment confirms the curvature of the earth.

Per the Wikipedias
Quote
The most famous of the observations, and the one that was taught in schools until photographs of the Earth from space became available, involved a set of three poles fixed at equal height above water level along this length. As the surface of the water was assumed to be level, the discovery that the middle pole, when viewed carefully through a theodolite, was almost three feet (0.91 m) higher than the poles at each end was finally accepted as a new proof that the surface of the earth was indeed curved.

Rejoinder/rebuttal?
It was shown not to by Rowbotham, Lady Blount (who published pictures attesting this fact), and Hampden along with Daniel Shenton the current president and a few other youtubers recently IIRC. Hampden was against Wallace, the inventor of evolution. Wallace cheated needing the money and colluded with a local editor who played judge. Hampden successfully sued after a lifelong battle.

From what I understand, Daniel also had a plaque installed there.

Some hollow earthers in the earth 20th century also replicated a similar experiment on a large lake. I'd have to check my references on this one though for the details.
« Last Edit: June 16, 2016, 11:09:09 AM by John Davis »
If you ,can't .ar.guue both sides, you understand neither

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #26 on: June 16, 2016, 12:51:45 PM »
Still want one measurement of the earth that is inconsistent with a spherical one.
Bedford Level Canal.

I'm confused.  That experiment confirms the curvature of the earth.

Per the Wikipedias
Quote
The most famous of the observations, and the one that was taught in schools until photographs of the Earth from space became available, involved a set of three poles fixed at equal height above water level along this length. As the surface of the water was assumed to be level, the discovery that the middle pole, when viewed carefully through a theodolite, was almost three feet (0.91 m) higher than the poles at each end was finally accepted as a new proof that the surface of the earth was indeed curved.

Rejoinder/rebuttal?
It was shown not to by Rowbotham, Lady Blount (who published pictures attesting this fact), and Hampden along with Daniel Shenton the current president and a few other youtubers recently IIRC. Hampden was against Wallace, the inventor of evolution. Wallace cheated needing the money and colluded with a local editor who played judge. Hampden successfully sued after a lifelong battle.

From what I understand, Daniel also had a plaque installed there.

Some hollow earthers in the earth 20th century also replicated a similar experiment on a large lake. I'd have to check my references on this one though for the details.

Rowbotham did not detect any curvature, this is true.  This is because his instruments were rudimentary and insufficiently sensitive.  Subsequent experiments with more advanced equipment in the same location showed the opposite.  I do not understand why you hold to experiments done 100 years ago with antiquated equipment and disregard recent ones with more sensitive equipment?  As part of my grad school work, I used to measure the distance between two portions of a gene within a single cell.  I can't do that with a tape measure.  A tape measure measures long-ish distances, inches and feet.  It's not sensitive enough.  I need a finely calibrated confocal microscope.  That lets me measure distances on a micron scale. 

A 100 year old telescope is a relatively unrefined instrument, while modern surveying equipment is extremely precise.  Why don't you trust new, better technology?

?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #27 on: June 18, 2016, 03:56:56 PM »
Come on, John. Where are you? Have you no rejoinder?

?

MR PIG

  • 4
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #28 on: June 19, 2016, 07:00:13 AM »
Quote
Why is there different timezones and night one place meanwhile day somewhere else?
There are simulations of how the sun travels around over the flat earth in the FAQ.

Yes, but none of these models can explain a lunar cycle, nor can they explain Antarctica having four months of constant sunlight, can you please provide me with an answer.

Many Thanks


?

ibelle42

  • 68
  • +0/-0
Re: I'm new and have some questions
« Reply #29 on: June 19, 2016, 03:59:44 PM »
Come on, John!  Tell me why a more precise experiment that disagrees with you isn't valid!