If I read this forum correctly, the following is proposed to be true:
1) The earth is flat.
2) There is no such force as gravity.
3) The effects of gravity are due to the Earth accelerating constantly upwards at a rate of 9.81 m/s^2
4) The reason the oceans do not drain out is that there is an ice wall preventing them from doing so.
5) The sun, moon, planets and stars are very close to the Earth compared to the Round Earth model of the universe.
6) There are no satellites: instead, there are high-flying balloons and other such devices allowing us to communicate
This last point got my imagination going: I can't believe I didn't think of this when I heard of people falling off the ice wall.
If we are constantly accelerating upward, where does the air come from and go to?
There are only two possible answers: the all-air theory and the no-air theory.
1) The space we are traveling through is filled with air. There is no such thing as empty space.
If this is the case, why does the air get thinner at higher altitudes? Why does matter less dense than air rise? If the air is so dirty that we can't see from San Fransisco to Boston on a clear day (or a dark night), why can we see the moon, sun and stars, which are about the same distance? Why don't balloons rise forever?
2) The space we're traveling through is empty. The air is kept in by the Ice Wall or an Ice Dome or an Ice Horizon.
If this is the case, why doesn't the sun (which is much closer to the dome than to the earth) melt through the ice dome? If it's just a wall, why doesn't the matter get sucked out into the vacuum? Why is there any air at all above the wall? Why don't disturbances in the air carry the rest of the air over the edge?
Since airplanes fly routinely at 30,000+ feet, the wall at the edge must be at least that high (and thus should be visible to anyone who sail or fly within or near to the Antarctic circle). However, this still leaves the question: why isn't the air sucked out by the vacuum? Why don't
I'd like to hear some well-thought-out answers, since I went through the trouble of coming up with a well-though-out critique.
And please, no flaming, or one-sentence answers, or name-calling or anything other than well-thought-out debating. Let's please keep this civil.