How high is the sun?

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How high is the sun?
« on: January 07, 2023, 01:28:44 PM »
Just curious as to whether there is any kind of consensus among flatists as to the altitude of the sun above the flat earth.

And, if so, how high is it and how has this height been determined?

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Wolvaccine

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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2023, 05:41:34 PM »
If the sun were 32 miles across and a few thousand miles high the Eratosthenes experiment where you place sticks in the ground at some distance and observe the shadows has the math check out

Also have a read about this dude. The flat earth teaching was enforced

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilbur_Glenn_Voliva





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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #2 on: January 08, 2023, 07:22:59 AM »
If the sun were 32 miles across and a few thousand miles high the Eratosthenes experiment where you place sticks in the ground at some distance and observe the shadows has the math check out

Also have a read about this dude. The flat earth teaching was enforced

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilbur_Glenn_Voliva

Thanks for that link. I love his reasoning - "God would not have placed the light far away" !

So, he put it at no more than 3,000 miles. Any other offers?

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wise

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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #3 on: January 08, 2023, 11:14:05 PM »
Just curious as to whether there is any kind of consensus among flatists as to the altitude of the sun above the flat earth.

And, if so, how high is it and how has this height been determined?
Calculating this here (LINK), I found that it's about 4400 miles. On the second try, I calculated the average altitude to be 4000 miles. But the distance of 5000 miles appears to be a distance that is generally agreed upon.

This is still not an exact value. The reason for this is that there is a layer of water between the sun and the earth, the thickness of which we do not know, and this layer may cause a different perception of height due to the refraction of the sun's rays.


Simply why is this.

Finding the true height of the sun is not easy due to the layer of water in between, but still, accepting a value between 4000-5000 miles as correct will give the least erroneous result. I think you might have started this thread to troll the believers because you are the sleeper cell. No problem. Finding the truth here may be still possible. The rest is not important. I won't respond to citations, most of them are already on the block list. You're not on the block list but it doesn't matter, This answer is sufficient in every way. Objections are not important.

I hope you got the most appropriate answer from all perspectives.

Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #4 on: January 10, 2023, 05:04:53 AM »
Finding the true height of the sun is not easy due to the layer of water in between, but still, accepting a value between 4000-5000 miles as correct will give the least erroneous result. I think you might have started this thread to troll the believers because you are the sleeper cell. No problem. Finding the truth here may be still possible. The rest is not important. I won't respond to citations, most of them are already on the block list. You're not on the block list but it doesn't matter, This answer is sufficient in every way. Objections are not important.

I hope you got the most appropriate answer from all perspectives.

Thank you for your interesting response O Wise One!

The layer of water is obviously important in this question. Do you think it would be possible to determine its thickness or will that remain forever unknown?

By the way, not trolling at all. I deliberately raised this question in Q&A to avoid any debate.

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wise

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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #5 on: January 11, 2023, 08:37:53 PM »
Finding the true height of the sun is not easy due to the layer of water in between, but still, accepting a value between 4000-5000 miles as correct will give the least erroneous result. I think you might have started this thread to troll the believers because you are the sleeper cell. No problem. Finding the truth here may be still possible. The rest is not important. I won't respond to citations, most of them are already on the block list. You're not on the block list but it doesn't matter, This answer is sufficient in every way. Objections are not important.

I hope you got the most appropriate answer from all perspectives.

Thank you for your interesting response O Wise One!

The layer of water is obviously important in this question. Do you think it would be possible to determine its thickness or will that remain forever unknown?

By the way, not trolling at all. I deliberately raised this question in Q&A to avoid any debate.
The answer is not interesting but the true perspective to this question.

Determining the thickness of the water above is possible. We need true sun and hour statistics to do that. Since current statistics have been manip :-[ulated because of various reason, it is seemingly not easy at this stage. But I believe we will.

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faded mike

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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #6 on: January 26, 2023, 01:02:27 PM »
When ever i hear this question i just think to myself - you are asking for the moon!
"Using our vast surveillance system, we've uncovered revolutionary new information..."
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theoretical formula for Earths curvature = 8 inches multiplied by (miles squared) = inches drop from straight forward

kids: say no to drugs

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faded mike

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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #7 on: January 26, 2023, 01:04:28 PM »
But that is a point of view largely uninformed of the thinking and teachings of fe.  As for the actual numbers that get mentioned... I understand that some of the fe authors have adressed this, but i wonder if they were just offering some vague idea as an answer to someones, or perhaps a repeated querry or if it is a really the truth. if anyone can answer this i would appreciate. I just think that if the earth was simply  3000 or what ever miles up and the geometry works according to basic known laws - that would really surprize me. Are these things adressed in the several main FE books, or can anyone tell the answer.
« Last Edit: January 26, 2023, 01:15:19 PM by faded mike »
"Using our vast surveillance system, we've uncovered revolutionary new information..."
           -them

theoretical formula for Earths curvature = 8 inches multiplied by (miles squared) = inches drop from straight forward

kids: say no to drugs

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Space Cowgirl

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Re: How high is the sun?
« Reply #8 on: January 26, 2023, 02:39:22 PM »
Dear faded mike, this is FE Q&A. If you know the answer to the question, you can answer. If you have a question about FET, you can ask. Everything else belongs in other places on the forum.
I'm sorry. Am I to understand that when you have a boner you like to imagine punching the shit out of Tom Bishop? That's disgusting.