Illusions
Have absolutely nothing to do with this.
Again, perspective is simple geometry.
The horizon forming on a RE is likewise simple geometry.
If you wish to invoke magic or illusions you will need far more than your pathetic assertions.
Horizons are created by the same magic which makes the surface appear to rise upward in the distance.
That is not magic.
That is simple geometry.
A formula you have been provided with many times.
Again, the angle of dip, a, can be calculated as:
a = atan(h/d).
For a perfectly flat surface, that will give you a=atan(h0/d).
If you plot this you see that the angle decreases, continually, giving you the "appearance" of a rising surface.
But if you describe it honestly, you aren't seeing anything rise. Instead the angle between straight out level, and a point on the ground some distance away decreases with increasing distance.
But for a round surface, h is not constant.
Instead, as a first approximation, you have a=atan(h0/d + d/2r).
This also initially has the angle decrease. But eventually it reaches a point where it begins to increase again.
That point is the horizon.
That is real physical point, the edge of a sphere which you cannot see past.
NONE OF THIS is an illusion.
But again, you being the lying POS you are need to pretend it is so you can just assert that whatever nonsense you need magically happens for no reason at all.
They’re created by perspective over long flat surfaces, in classic horizons on the flat surfaces.
No, they aren't.
They are created by simple geometry (which might be called perspective) over ROUND surfaces, as seen on countless round surface and NEVER seen on a flat surface.
Look at a table, which is flat.
Where the only horizon we see is the edge, where it curves down.
Compare that to a ball, where no matter what angle you view it from, you get a horizon.
How would a curve over the table look?
Depends how significant it is.
If it has a large enough radius of curvature, you wont be able to tell the difference.
If it curves enough, and you are low enough, you will get a horizon forming, a point beyond which the surface hides the rest.
It’s very easily shown
Then why are you completely incapable of doing so.
you refuse to accept a long flat surface could exist at all.
I do accept it can exist.
I'm just not going to allow you to use a long level surface, which curve following the curve of Earth, to pretend it is a flat surface to pretend a flat surface produces horizons.
Because that is entirely circular reasoning to try to defeat a simple argument which conclusively shows Earth is round.
Again, if you want to assert a flat surface will magically produce a horizon, try explaining how.
Seeing an entire ship going out one mile, is not curving 8 inches down and blocking out 8 inches of the ship.
It is if your eyes are at sea level.
Notice how even you admit that the curved table would still rise, just to a lesser extent.
The same happens here.
You can even test it with a curved table, and see how if you are high enough, the entire object sitting on the surface is still visible.
If you want to hide it from view it needs to be beyond the horizon.
That is because once you go past the horizon, the angular position of the object is lower than part of the surface in front of the object, so it blocks the view.
Before the horizon that isn't the case, so nothing gets blocked from view.
Again, it is really simple. So simple a child could understand it. But here you are still playing dumb.

The entire surface one mile out is flat
No, it isn't. And you just lying to everyone wont change that.
but even more curve not there at all
Based on what?
Just what observation or measurement are you making to confirm that?
Only when the ship is near three miles out does the surface appear to rise lesser, and the very bottom of the ship not be seen anymore.
Just like we expect for a round Earth, and NOTHIGN like we expect for a flat surface.
Once again, this observations refutes a flat Earth and confirms a round Earth.
Yet the whole surface is still seen as flat
No, it isn't.
We don't see the whole surface, just the bit to the horizon.
And you are yet to explain just what magical observation you are making which allows you to see it as flat.
Do you mean you are just so pathetic and desperate for it to be flat that you "see it as flat" regardless of what it is?
As much as you want perspective to flatten a curved surface
No, we don't.
That is just your pathetic strawman.
No curve exists
Except the curve which clearly does as clearly shown by the horizon.
Something you STILL refuse to explain.
A city 50 miles away is seen, a flat lake between you and the city. The very bottom isn’t seen due to perspective.
Perspective has no ability to hide the bottom.
If it did, you would explain how.
But you can't, so you just repeat this pathetic lie.
The very bottom is not seen due to curvature.
There’s no curvature that would make half the buildings cut out of sight down your curved ball surface.
Except the curvature that has already been explained to you, Curvature you could easily test yourself with any large ball and an object you can stick on it.
Again:

This shows a building (or any object really) as that black line off in the distance.
It then shows the limit of vision for 3 hypothetical observers at different altitudes.
The blue observer is the lowest. Their horizon is the closest, and has the entire building blocked from view.
The purple is up next, being at an intermediate height, with a portion of the building hidden.
And the highest observer sees the entire building.
So yes, curvature most certainly can hide half the building.
Do you know what can't?
Perspective.
That is because perspective simply makes things appear smaller.
If the top of the building is resolvable the bottom should be as well.
The only time perspective would hide part of a building is when the building is much thinner at the top, so it could be to thin to resolve the top.
That proves Earth is flat
No, it doesn't.
The fact the bottoms of the buildings are missing proves Earth is not flat.