I watched the debunk the flat earth videos and was not convinced. It seems to me that most scientists would never even consider wether the earth was flat in the first place, do you disagree?
The "scientists" of old did.
The assumed stance was that Earth was flat. That was based upon nothing more than an assumption with no critical thought applied.
But then people started to make observations and question that.
It was those people so long ago that realised that Earth was round.
Modern day scientists typically don't.
That is because for most, it either isn't all that relevant to their field (
e.g. to a biologist studying viruses, Earth being flat or round isn't all that important), or it is so relevant and all the evidence points to it being round.
Science is a constructive process.
Each person doesn't start from scratch, instead they build upon the work of others.
This means if others have shown that Earth is round and that is accepted by the majority of the community, most people just accept that and build upon it.
It is only when a problem arises that people will question it. This has happened for several things, such as classical relativity.
However, plenty of scientists have thought about it, and the vast majority, if not all, accept that the evidence is overwhelmingly in favour of Earth being round.
The only way for Earth to be flat is if it somehow behaved in almost every way, just like a round Earth would.
As for some of your other comments, basic high school science includes Earth being round. Many here reject basic high school science.
There is also yet to be a mechanism of the formation of a FE provided which can stand up to scrutiny, while there is an explanation for RE. That is why people question if a FE is possible.
But consider this video if you please.
"Our Solar System: Evidence of Creation"
This video relies upon the current understanding of the world, i.e. not a flat Earth.
It is also quite long so I wont watch it all.
It starts off on pretty shaky ground when it claims the big bang claims that everything is explainable by current theories.
No one in their right mind asserts that. We do not know everything.
It also ignores the fundamental problem with creation.
If God created everything, that should include God, so they have a god creating itself...
He says that gravity cant conglomerate planets.
And that seems to be all.
He says that it can't happen without explaining why.
He also uses some quotes ignoring key parts of them (such as saying sulfur is volatile while ignoring iron sulfide, which was already in the quote).
He makes grand claims about what evolutionary asstronomy indicates is possible or impossible.
Instead of saying that they are possible, but not directly predicted he claims it is impossible, all to pretend it is evidence of creation.
He also completely skips the creation approach.
He shows alleged problems for evolution and act like that makes creation correct by default.
In reality, this is just another problem for creation. If the world was created for us, we would expect a model like those FE models proposed now. Instead we have a universe which is mostly empty were we occupy a tiny volume.
Creation doesn't indicate any of that should be true for Mercury, instead he uses the fact that a god could have made it like that so it is fine, again ignoring the fact that evolutionary astronomy indicates a similar thing, that it could be like that.
When moving on to Earth he makes the same old claims of it being "uniquely designed for life", with claims that a change can make in inhospitable, ignoring the extent of those changes, and more importantly, ignoring that the god would be designing the life and could thus make it suitable for any environment. If a god wanted to, they could design beings that live on mercury, or venus or even the sun. So the uniquely designed for life simply doesn't hold.
For the changes, he makes no mention of how much slower Earth would need to rotate before temperature fluctuations would be too great (and why that couldn't simply mean some creatures live on the hot side while others live on the cold side), or how fast it would need to rotate before producing violent winds, while ignoring the fact we do still get violent winds in the form of cyclones, and the option of having a much smaller sun revolve around Earth.
He appeals to axial tilt for seasons, but why would life need seasons? This limits the availability of various things with some things only being possible in certain seasons.
It often means crops need to be planted at a particular time of the year, grown over a long time and then harvested with the harvest lasting a year if you want the crop year round.
Meanwhile if there were no seasons and life was designed for that, crops could be planted at any time and harvested at any time.
These issues indicate Earth is not the creation of some omnipotent being. At best it would be the creation of a powerful but limited being or race which was creating it to be suitable for life within their limitations.
He also has at least another blatant lie, regarding Earth's magnetic field.
The dynamo theory (which has experimental backing) predicts the magnetic field produced by the dynamo to be unstable and flip at various intervals, with the length of these being somewhat random and dependent upon the size of the dynamo.
I think I will stop watching now. If you think there is a good point I missed or skipped over feel free to point it out.
I actually didn't watch many debunk vids, if anyone wants to suggest one...
I prefer logical arguments to videos.
There are many indicating Earth is round.
One of these is the horizon.
The horizon indicates an edge. This is seen when you view the edge of mountains or the edge of a table.
If Earth was flat, then out at sea the only horizon that should be visible is another land mass or the edge of Earth itself.
This prevents a various serious problem for FE as this edge of Earth is very far away and the atmosphere is not perfectly clear.
This means if Earth was flat the horizon wouldn't exist as it does. Instead it would be a blur, where the atmosphere scatters the light so much everything fades to a blur. The only time you would expect to see a clear horizon is when looking at mountains or the like.
This applies even more for level plains where there aren't even any waves to be an excuse.
Instead we often see a clear horizon, quite close to us, with a distance dependent upon our height above Earth.
This means edges are all over Earth. The only kind of shapes to have this property are round ones, which indicates Earth is round.
Objects are also obscured by the horizon, as if the Earth is a hill blocking your vision to them.
Then there are the stars, where there are 2 celestial poles, one always due north, the other always due south, always 180 degrees apart. This is impossible on a FE. (at least where you can circle the pole) The common FE model has a single north pole, and should not have any south celestial pole. The bipolar model has a north and south pole, but they are only 180 degrees apart at one longitude. For all others the angle between them should be smaller and for some locations they should be in the same direction.
And there are plenty of other arguments, but these 2 are fairly simple and you can test it yourself.
In my suppressed inventions book, there is an article that suggests proper nutrition is always over looked. I believe that doctors don't learn nutrition in school, but Hippocrates said "let thy food be thy medicine", and they all take a "Hippocratic oath".
The Hippocratic oath is effectively to heal to the best of your judgement rather than to injure or damage, not to follow everything Hippocrates suggested. That can even allow them to blatantly lie to a patient.
Also, it is much more of a symbolic gesture and doctors these days do not follow it. Instead they have a set of ethical rules and regulations covering what they can and can't do.
Yes, nutrition is important and most, if not all, medical doctors know that. But nutrition alone can't cure everything.