Also you seem to assume the earth is round in stating it was "concluded" rather than assumed.
Because other things already showed it was round.
The experiment didn't prove Earth was round, it merely measured its circumference.
But like I already said, all it takes is the knowledge that the sun is very far away and that allows you to determine the shape without assuming it.
It is a fact that Eratosthenes assumed it in his calculations. Why he took on this axiom and whether it is justified is a completely different question.
No it isn't, as that relates directly to if it is an assumption or if it is a conclusion from prior work.
This then directly relates to if you can honestly discard Earth being round to try to perform a different experiment.
But more importantly, simply having Earth is round is not enough. You also need to have the sun very far from Earth. Otherwise it is still an unconstrained problem.
Several others, such as ancient Taoists, have performed the exact same experiment except they did not make any foregone conclusions
Yes they did. They falsely concluded Earth was flat, with no basis for this at all.
More than this, we don't even know the actual method Eratosthenes used.
So how can you then so confidently assert that he assumed Earth was round in his calculations?
Again, all that he actually needs is to conclude the sun is very far away.
As Leo Ferrari points out - a flat earth in curved space would appear round.
You mean he states, with no justification at all, and it being unclear if it is parody or not.
And where your attempt at justification relies upon first appealing to gravity to show a circular orbit is a geodesic in spacetime, and then ignoring gravity to get a straight path over the Earth at low speed.
And it relies upon a principle of Euclidean geometry when Euclidean geometry is rejected.
Also they don't take pictures of the whole earth - they stitch them together.
Why falsely assert a false dichotomy?
They do both.
They take pictures from close to Earth which they stitch together to form a composite image, and they take pictures from quite far away, showing Earth from one edge to the other in a single image.
For example, one good one for this is EPIC on DSCOVR, positioned at the Earth-Sun L1.
But there are also plenty of satellites in geostationary orbit, like himiwari 8, and the GEOS series.