teo123 wrote:OK, you are right, I didn't check the Wikipedia page about horizons and I should have. Admittedly, I was biased towards Flat Earthism.
Thank you for admitting that.
teo123 wrote:Hey, that was the first time I saw someone trying to use the perspective as an explanation.
That's the standard explanation. On the Flat Earth forums, most people are more interested in proving Flat Earth wrong than demonstrating why Round Earth is consistent -- this is a problem.
As I explained before we began this, it's impossible to prove Flat Earth wrong because it's a conspiracy theory and an ad-hoc hypothesis with ever moving goal posts, just as most people can't prove that God does not exist because it's purportedly unfalsifiable -- as soon as I debunk one argument, a new model/excuse can be made which overcomes those problems.
This is why my point here is just to explain how the Round Earth works, and show you how it fits our observations.
And, crucially, how science works and why we should always prefer the falsifiable model which makes real predictions and is a genuine theory to an ad-hoc hypothesis which fails to make predictions and constantly changes when confronted with evidence against it when it does.
This is an issue of intellectual honesty, and why legitimate science is special, and superior to religion and other pseudosciences.
Round Earth is completely consistent with observation. That's all we need to know in order to accept it for now -- we TENTATIVELY accept scientific findings until we have the means to demonstrate otherwise. You do not have those means, and nobody on the Flat Earth forums does either.
Anybody with those means -- a basic education in math and physics -- can work out simple tests at home to prove it.
teo123 wrote:Our schools simply don't educate us well enough to understand why those types of explanations are faulty. I relied on my intuition instead of even trying to calculate how far the horizon would drop down and I simply couldn't imagine how big the Earth is.
Intuition -- not just your intuition, but all intuition -- is unreliable and very often wrong, particularly at scales and using concepts that are unrelated to primitive human behavior. If it's not relevant to a cave man's survival, your intuition about it is probably wrong.
Read this:
http://hubpages.com/education/Counterin ... Statistics
NEVER make 'intuitive' assumptions when it comes to math or statistics. Your brain is not built for it.
If you don't explicitly do the math (and check it), do not trust yourself.
The most important thing you can learn about science is to discard your intuitions and control your biases; this is the only way we access a shared and objective reality.
teo123 wrote:But I don't think you should blame me for everything. Look, Wikipedia doesn't even mention that there is an angle at which you see the horizon.
It's something that should be self evident based on the trigonometry. You can see by my diagram, I hope, that the angle the tall man is viewing the horizon at is lower.
teo123 wrote:As for the Mount Everest, the professional photographers use special braces to ensure the camera is correctly aligned, right?
No, they use a tripod to keep the camera from moving. They are not trying to center anything, they're just artists (photographers are not scientists, they frame things however they think they will look good, and then crop them more later).
Anyway, the Mount Everest is a bad example, because you can not see the sea level horizon, you can just see mountains.
You need to view the same level horizon from low and high up to see the change. If the horizon you're looking at is elevated too, that's a different situation.
teo123 wrote:So, you asked me to try that at home, yet it is not visible even from the Mount Everest.
The mountain picture is a bad example. Not only is it not a level shot, the horizon being viewed is mountains, which are not significantly shorter than the mountain from which the picture is taken. You need a large height difference between yourself and the horizon.
Can you find a tall building near you from which you can see the ocean, or a very level plane on the horizon?
teo123 wrote:Lot of people believe that the Earth looks round from there, when it simply doesn't.
Lots of vegans make the argument that we shouldn't eat meat because there's magical fear essence in the food which causes us to become spiritually violent.
This isn't a good argument. Does that make veganism wrong? Of course not. That's just a bad argument for it.
I'm sure there are plenty of mathematically and scientifically illiterate members of the Flat Earth forum who have made bad arguments for the Earth being round.
The sea-level horizon,
IF you could see it all around Mt. Everest, would be ever so slightly curved, but the curve would not likely be enough for you to see with your eye. You'd need to use special equipment to detect it.
Did you read that abstract I linked you to, which was from a study about the minimum altitude at which a photograph would be able to clearly show the curvature of the Earth?
https://www.osapublishing.org/ao/abstra ... -47-34-H39
35,000 feet.
Everest is only
29,000 feet above sea level -- this may not be enough -- AND the land around it is higher than sea level, so the horizon is raised too because it is elevated on other mountains.
You need to be up high, AND have a clear view of a low altitude horizon.
Everest satisfies neither of these criteria. We would not expect to be able to visually discern the curvature of the Earth from such a low vantage point, surrounded by such high elevated (and irregular) land.
Don't assume I'm making a particular argument without asking. We could calculate the curvature expected from a particular elevation (that study only examined one, it looks like), but the math would be too much for you, and I'm not interested in spending hours drawing diagrams to explain it.
teo123 wrote:As for the airplanes, I considered that also. I assumed it is impossible to correctly align a camera on an airplane since it doesn't move neither at a constant speed (so you would have to deal with inertial forces) neither at a constant angle (so it is not helpful to use braces). Am I wrong?
It's not difficult to align a camera on an airplane. You need something like gyroscopic stabilization.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BSY_0md_sY
Airplanes move at a pretty constant speed once at altitude, as long as they are not in turbulence.
However, you don't need an airplane. A tall enough building should be suitable.
OR you can just learn more about astronomy and geophysics, and realize that at least millions of people would have to be in on the conspiracy to cover up the Earth being flat.
What you have been experiencing is something called the Dunning-Kruger effect:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E ... ger_effect
Your knowledge of science and mathematics is so minuscule, you do not yet know enough to understand how much you do not know. It would (and will if you study) blow your mind.
I could prove the Earth is round with a good clock (probably a real atomic clock, which would be a little expensive but still affordable to the average person).
Did you know that time is slower in a gravity well, and that a clock ticks a little slower closer to the Earth than high up?
This would not occur if the Earth were in a constant force field of acceleration, and only works with a round Earth and gravity.
This all comes from relativity, which is the cornerstone of modern physics (E=mc^2).
This has been proved many times across the world:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... itude.html
I could prove the Earth is round with a carefully prepared tank of water.
Did you know the rotation of the Earth means there is a slight circular force applied to everything, and is different in the North and South hemispheres?
This could not occur on a flat Earth.
This all comes from basic Newtonian physics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coriolis_ ... nd_toilets
It's a misconception that toilets/sinks/etc. drain in a particular direction because of this (this has to do with jet direction, shape of the tub, or movement in the water from being disturbed), but you can prepare a still sample of water and observe the effect.
I could probably list out a dozen experiments you could do at home and with minimal monetary investment which would all prove the Earth is round. I've probably already blown your mind with those two examples (which are relatively trivial).
The thing is that you don't even have the basic scientific literacy to understand how the Earth can be proved round, and how much of science relies on these observations.
You have failed to understand how EVERYTHING in science would be wrong if the Earth was flat. I would probably be worshiping its makers, since such a flat construction obviously could not arise naturally.
There's no reason for you to do any of these experiments yourself, because the very idea that you would doubt this only reveals an ignorance of science too profound to pull off any of these experiments.
Other people know more than you do. It's pretty simple, and once you grasp that concept and stop insulting everybody who has scientific literacy basic enough to understand why the Earth is round and that the Flat Earth model is pseudoscience, you'll be equipped to start really learning about the world around you instead of these masturbatory fantasies.
Do you have any other reservations about the Round Earth model?