Karen Douglas, a psychologist who studies FE, says that the vagueness of FE is part of its appeal.
https://www.livescience.com/24310-flat-earth-belief.htmlThis makes sense to me, since I always want to pin things down. When I have everything pinned down and it matches, it is right (to me, some go by gut feel or match those around them, or whatever). This accounts for some of the bad feeling here, I am trying to pin down while FEs like it vague.
I have been told many times by FEs things like:
"We don't know yet", "Could be several things", "different FEs have different theories on that", etc.
I would like to pin down the conspiracies. I think a conspiracy big enough to fool everyone about RE and furnish things like GPS that work AND appear to use "false" RE explanations would be detectable and describable. FEs will not pursue that with me.
I ask what is the FE position on maps, I get no one map, no map with a scale in km or mi, just "could be whatever". ANd no concern from FEs that they can't make a map. When it comes to maps, vague is a bad thing if you want to go somewhere. Vague is a good thing if you want your position to not be revealed as false.
FE will not be pinned down. RE is totally pinned down, one definitive position.
For FE to become accepted and useful, it must stop being vague. If you like it vague, you don't want it to conclude anything. Enjoying endless speculation may entertain you, but it is the opposite of science, acceptance and usefulness.
RE just romps over FE daily, we win so big every day, a couple of web sites with lots of name calling and ignorance versus the actual facts used to do things like make container ships show up with goods for you and me and pretty much all educated modern people.
If you want to play with the big boys, you need peer reviewed experiments, facts useful to enfineers, a pinned down and consistent system. Even if you pick at RE all day, it is a spoonful out of the ocean of facts interconnected that support RE.
FE is vague, and therefor not useful. Can some FE give me some definite info on any part of FE? If so, why does that person not convince all FEs?
RE is not vague, many have investigated, and using the info has helped to pin it down. For instance, In 1500, people needed accurate navigation and did not have it. Over hundreds of years, people pinned down RE in a consistent way, and now we have consistent facts useful to navigate precisely based on information increasingly pinned down and correlated with other things.
FE has none of this and won't because it would have to pin things down, and that process could never work without pinning things down.
FE can't pin down, because the process would reveal that FE is false, and RE is true, and that is why FEs won't go there.