No one is saying focus, but you still need to acknowledge them.
And acknowledging them doesn't mean discarding things which show them to be wrong.
What you are doing, thanks to the way you are insisting on framing it, is the equivalent of that good old chestnut "Just look out your window!"
Not in the slightest. The 2 are fundamentally different.
That argument assumes Earth is a tiny ball such that you would see significant curvature just by looking out your window.
That is based upon assuming a particular RE model which no one is arguing for and proving that model wrong. It is not arguing against a RE in general.
If you would like to try framing it as an argument against a RE in general, noting a FE is effectively a section of a RE with an infinite radius, go ahead.
The argument you are opposing is instead based upon making observations, and leading to conclusions based upon those observations which show that FE in general is wrong, where you can stop early if you are just wanting to focus on specific FE models.
The only way to respond to this argument is to acknowledge how it would look from the RE perspective, and point out that it makes perfect sense there.
And that is where the fundamental difference lies.
My argument is not a simple assertion that Earth is like the other planets. It is based upon observations which show that to be the case.
Some FE models can allow that to make sense, such as the ancient FE models and ones with bendy light which can still have large planets far from Earth. But for the common FE model it still doesn't make any sense because those observations aren't consistent with that model. Note: it isn't the logical reasoning where assumptions are made which aren't consistent, it is the observations themselves not being consistent.
That is the massive difference which you are ignoring.
For that argument you need to make assumptions about Earth, which when discarded renders the argument void. For my argument, no assumptions are made and there are just multiple ways to refute it.
Rather than your simplified view of 3 steps, it contains several more. Something more like:
A->B->C->D->E.
We agree that C shows that specific FE models are wrong.
I'm saying this shows Earth isn't flat.
You are saying this is a garbage argument against FE either because C shows FE models to be wrong and thus the rest isn't needed or because it magically somehow means it only applies to models which aren't refuted by C.
Again, what it is actually similar to is this:
Observations indicate that there is curvature. How are these observations explained on a FE?
You are arguing we can't use this as an argument, because it only argues against FE models which have curvature.
And don't start with the "But this is different!" It's not.
Sorry, I'm not just going to bow down and submit to your lies.
They are different. I don't care if you don't like that.
yours fails when you consider how things must look from the FE.
No it doesn't.
It just gets to end a little earlier.
But once you do that you aren't arguing against anything anyone actually holds to
Again, you are ignoring what I have said.
These tweaks have already been made to some extent with bendy light to try to explain things like why Polaris isn't visible south of the equator.
This bending of light means that the 45 degree angle used to determine the distance to Polaris isn't actually 45 degrees and instead would be much greater, meaning Polaris is much further than the 5000 km often quoted.
This would likewise apply to the moon and sun and other planets, meaning they are further than the common idea of 5000 km.
So I ask again: How far away are the planets in these models?
And again, people claim Earth is flat, my argument applies to that. If it refutes specific models earlier than the conclusion, that doesn't mean I'm not arguing against them.
Acknowledge that you have arguments against models with small planets, as you've insisted you have. Acknowledge that you can simply ask after the creation of the FE solar system.
Pretty sure I already have. Just to make it clear:
I acknowledge that there are other arguments which can be used, either against FE in general or against specific FE models, including the start of this argument.
You can easily replace this whole thread, but you refuse to do so because of no reason.
Yes, there are lots of arguments against a FE, that doesn't magically mean that an argument is bad.
An argument asking how the planets are formed can be replaced with observations indicating they are far away. Both can be replaced with arguments based upon observations of curvature.
That doesn't make those arguments bad.
Why pretend that there is only one good argument against FE and attack all those you think are inferior?
Again, the existence of other arguments, even better arguments, doesn't magically make an argument bad.
Arguments should be judged upon their own merits, not the merits of other arguments.
Instead of your tired old angry
It isn't angry, it is just objecting to your blatant misrepresentations of my post.
How about instead of arrogant and angry "NO YOUR WRONG", you just move on?
Why are you so adamant on claiming this argument is bad, when you need to misrepresent it so much to do so?
Also, I have made those arguments. FEers typically don't respond to them.
In fact, because of that it can actually be better to make less strong arguments, including incomplete ones to try to have FEers engage.