I don't know now. Anything I read about perspective seems to confirm my beliefs. I couldn't find anything about the "perspective bowing effect" you are talking about.
I know that things get smaller as they go away from you in the direction you are looking at. So do parallel lines appear to converge if they go away from you in the direction you are looking at. But things don't get smaller as they go to the left, relative to the direction you are looking at, or to the right, relative to the direction you are looking at. For example, a bird that's flying high in the sky is going to be the same apparent size as if it were on the point on the ground exactly below, right?
All the blue squares have an equal apparent size, and so do all the red squares, and neither the purple, nor the yellow lines appear to converge, right?
Right before I asked this question on this forum, I assumed that the solution is that the sunrays on the photos aren't exactly vertical, but appear vertical because of the clouds, and that the sunrays are actually vertical if and only if the sun is exactly in zenith. Could this be the correct answer?
A discussion on TFES forum
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
It wouldn't be very obvious in a single view without a wide angle lens.teo123 wrote:I don't know now. Anything I read about perspective seems to confirm my beliefs. I couldn't find anything about the "perspective bowing effect" you are talking about.
Look left: smaller at a distance. Look right: smaller at a distance. Center (next to you) is the largest.
http://c8.alamy.com/comp/BR79KA/a-base- ... BR79KA.jpg
Left: far away. Right: far away. Center: close.
It's not rocket science.
Of course they do. Center is the closest. Both left and right are farther away.teo123 wrote:But things don't get smaller as they go to the left, relative to the direction you are looking at, or to the right, relative to the direction you are looking at.
No, the bird in the sky is smaller if you're on the ground. Draw the triangle between you, the bird on the ground, and the bird in the sky. The hypotenuse is longer than the side. The distance to the flying bird is largest, so that bird will appear smaller.teo123 wrote:For example, a bird that's flying high in the sky is going to be the same apparent size as if it were on the point on the ground exactly below, right?
Perspective depends on total distance, not ground distance (that would be absurd).
The purple and yellow lines converge, but not all the way: they aren't long enough in view.teo123 wrote: All the blue squares have an equal apparent size, and so do all the red squares, and neither the purple, nor the yellow lines appear to converge, right?
The effect is small so you probably wouldn't notice it looking straight at this.
This could also contribute to the effect: it's very unlikely they were perfectly vertical. But even if they were vertical, perspective distortion should create a similar effect. We can't analyze any of this without knowing the camera position, the lens, the height of the clouds, the distance to the clouds and the sun on the water, etc. It's silly to try, because none of this would be rigorous.teo123 wrote: Right before I asked this question on this forum, I assumed that the solution is that the sunrays on the photos aren't exactly vertical, but appear vertical because of the clouds, and that the sunrays are actually vertical if and only if the sun is exactly in zenith. Could this be the correct answer?
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
And it can be entirely explained by this diagram of barrel distortion, right?It wouldn't be very obvious in a single view without a wide angle lens.
Look left: smaller at a distance. Look right: smaller at a distance. Center (next to you) is the largest.
And if we used some lens with the pincushion distortion, center would appear smaller than the sides, right?
And human eye creates none of those distortions, right?
Why would that be absurd? I simply don't understand what you are talking about. If you are looking towards the horizon, the distance in the direction you are looking at is called ground distance. And the projection of the bird on the image plane has to be the same size because of the triangle similarity.No, the bird in the sky is smaller if you're on the ground. Draw the triangle between you, the bird on the ground, and the bird in the sky. The hypotenuse is longer than the side. The distance to the flying bird is largest, so that bird will appear smaller.
Perspective depends on total distance, not ground distance (that would be absurd).
What are you talking about? They go from one end of the visual field to another, and therefore they have maximal possible visual angle.The purple and yellow lines converge, but not all the way: they aren't long enough in view.
The effect is small so you probably wouldn't notice it looking straight at this.
That's the only argument I can use when I discuss with Flat Earthers, right? Using the argument that the perspective would create the same effect even if they were perfectly vertical would be intellectually dishonest, since I don't even understand it, right?This could also contribute to the effect: it's very unlikely they were perfectly vertical. But even if they were vertical, perspective distortion should create a similar effect. We can't analyze any of this without knowing the camera position, the lens, the height of the clouds, the distance to the clouds and the sun on the water, etc. It's silly to try, because none of this would be rigorous.
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
Not the perspective. Barrel distortion may exaggerate it slightly.teo123 wrote: And it can be entirely explained by this diagram of barrel distortion, right?
Depends on how severe the distortion was. You'd have to have the distortion stronger than the perspective. A near-by object on the side would appear massive, though.teo123 wrote: And if we used some lens with the pincushion distortion, center would appear smaller than the sides, right?
The brain typically corrects for any distortions the eye makes, so you see only perspective. Eyes are weird, though.teo123 wrote: And human eye creates none of those distortions, right?
Use a shorter or taller person in the image or use a bird that's closer to the ground or higher up.teo123 wrote:And the projection of the bird on the image plane has to be the same size because of the triangle similarity.
Obviously if you are half as tall as the bird is flying (which would be absurdly tall, by the way, since when you see a bird in the sky it's usually over the trees) then they will appear the same size.
You are certainly NOT half as tall as the clouds. You would have to be standing on a very high mountain or in a plane (which I already explained in a prior post).
If you only understand that argument, then you can use that argument, but I don't think it will be very compelling to them.teo123 wrote:That's the only argument I can use when I discuss with Flat Earthers, right? Using the argument that the perspective would create the same effect even if they were perfectly vertical would be intellectually dishonest, since I don't even understand it, right?
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
But it isn't.Use a shorter or taller person in the image or use a bird that's closer to the ground or higher up.
Obviously if you are half as tall as the bird is flying (which would be absurdly tall, by the way, since when you see a bird in the sky it's usually over the trees) then they will appear the same size.
You are certainly NOT half as tall as the clouds. You would have to be standing on a very high mountain or in a plane (which I already explained in a prior post).
And if that with the triangle similarities isn't obvious from that diagram, let me try to make it even more obvious.
Obviously, the sizes of the projections are going to be directly proportional to the sizes of the objects, and not dependent on whether the object is left, relative to the eye, or right, relative to the eye, or in the center, relative to the eye, as long as their distances from the eye, in the direction the eye is looking at (the height of the triangle), regardless of the total distance, is equal.
When I claimed that the sunset is caused by the waves, you said I was insulting for denying the most basic common sense. How is what you are now doing different?
OK, it may be that I am just greatly misinterpreting what you are saying, so, please, be more clear.
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
Yes, it is. Stop being an idiot. The hypotenuse is obviously longer than the side. The bird in the sky is farther away from the ant than the bird on the ground. Stop trying to contradict that fact.teo123 wrote: But it isn't.
Farther away = visually smaller. In ANY direction.
Even if you use the angle, the two lines you've drawn to the bird in the sky obviously have a tighter angle between them, meaning the projection inside the eye (at a set distance) is smaller.
It is obvious from the diagram you just drew that what I said is correct. If it isn't visually obvious to you, then do the fucking math.teo123 wrote: And if that with the triangle similarities isn't obvious from that diagram, let me try to make it even more obvious.
Instead, you've drawn another convoluted diagram with no math whatsoever: it's clearly not useful to you.
Because you're a moron. "Why" is something you're going to have to figure out on your own, because you're pissing me off by continuing to argue for your position (again without attempting to do the math) when your assumption should be that it is wrong, and your effort here should be to humbly try to understand why that is rather than challenging me. You're doing again what I have repeatedly tried to teach you not to do.teo123 wrote: When I claimed that the sunset is caused by the waves, you said I was insulting for denying the most basic common sense. How is what you are now doing different?
This basically sumarizes this thread: http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/ ... val/n12792
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
Yes, of course, but the distance between the eye and the image plane isn't constant, rather it grows with the angle (not the visual angle, but the angle between the horizontal line and the line that connects the eye with the object). For example, the projection the ant sees of the bird in the sky is farther away than the projection of the bird on the ground. The differences in visual angles and the distances between the eye and the projections, in this case, cancel each other out.Even if you use the angle, the two lines you've drawn to the bird in the sky obviously have a tighter angle between them, meaning the projection inside the eye (at a set distance) is smaller.
If I do the math showing that homothety doesn't create similar shapes (see the second diagram), that means that my math is, as usually, wrong.If it isn't visually obvious to you, then do the fucking math.
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
No. Not even close.teo123 wrote:rather it grows with the angle (not the visual angle, but the angle between the horizontal line and the line that connects the eye with the object).
The angle is based on the difference in two lines: From the top of the object, and from the bottom of the object, each to the eye. An arbitrary horizontal line factoring into this has no place (sometimes, in some illustrations, the object will happen to retreat from the eye along a horizontal path and the bottom will stay fixed to that line, but it's nothing special about the horizontal, that's just where the bottom happened to be in that illustration).
Where the hell are you getting this nonsense? Is this some fucked up flat-earther logic?
That's not true, and your underlying assumptions about how all of this works are inherently false. There are so many obvious implications to such a claim that are absurd. If you hold a pencil out an equal distance from your face with your arm, and you move it in an arc over your head (keeping the same distance) does it appear to grow larger?teo123 wrote: The differences in visual angles and the distances between the eye and the projections, in this case, cancel each other out.
Do the fucking math and it will become obvious while you're doing it that none of your assumptions hold.
If you do some math of any kind, it will at least help you identify your errors.teo123 wrote: If I do the math showing that homothety doesn't create similar shapes (see the second diagram), that means that my math is, as usually, wrong.
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
I don't know now. No, and I guess it is because your eyes follow it, so the image plane doesn't stay the same, for the same reason as the horizon seems to raise with you as you go up. I've tried to do that experiment while I was focused on another non-moving pencil in my other hand exactly in front of my eyes, but not close to them, and, yes, that moving pencil I wasn't focused on appeared to grow larger. The difference was barely perceptible, and it could be only because I expected it.If you hold a pencil out an equal distance from your face with your arm, and you move it in an arc over your head (keeping the same distance) does it appear to grow larger?
OK, let me try. Let's not deal with the third dimension, to make things simpler. Let's assume that the ant, looking towards the horizon, is at A(0,0), that the bottom part of the bird on the ground is at B(10,0), that the top part of the bird on the ground is at C(10,10), that the bottom part of the bird in the sky is at D(10,100) and that the top part of the bird in the sky is at E(10,110), and that the image plane is the line x=1 (because, again, we are not dealing with the third dimension).Do the fucking math and it will become obvious while you're doing it that none of your assumptions hold.
The light ray between A and B is y=0, so the projection of B on the image plane is (where the light ray and the image plane intersect) B'=(1,0). The light ray between C and A is y=x, so C'=(1,1). The light ray between D and A is y=10*x, so D'=(1,10). The light ray between E and A is y=11*x, so E'=(1,11).
So, the size of the projection of the bird on the ground is the distance between B' and C', which is 1. The size of the projection of the bird in the sky is the distance between D' and E', which is also 1. Are their projections equal? Yes, they are. It just affirmed my beliefs.
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Re: A discussion on TFES forum
No, it's because if it's at the same distance from you, it doesn't get larger based on perspective just because it's higher up. That's ridiculous.teo123 wrote: I don't know now. No, and I guess it is because your eyes follow it, so the image plane doesn't stay the same, for the same reason as the horizon seems to raise with you as you go up.
What you are describing is a pincushion distortion.
At least you recognize that. If you move off center from a lens, there are also optical distortions (different levels of zoom).teo123 wrote:The difference was barely perceptible, and it could be only because I expected it.
If you wanted to do this properly, you'd have to use a camera and account for that.
The whole idea is based on a misunderstanding of perspective, though.
The ant's lens (assuming it has a human-like eye, which it doesn't) is at that position. It doesn't matter what way the ant is looking unless you assume some kind of distortion from the lens. That's not something you want to deal with to just understand basic perspective.teo123 wrote: OK, let me try. Let's not deal with the third dimension, to make things simpler. Let's assume that the ant, looking towards the horizon, is at A(0,0), that the bottom part of the bird on the ground is at B(10,0), that the top part of the bird on the ground is at C(10,10), that the bottom part of the bird in the sky is at D(10,100) and that the top part of the bird in the sky is at E(10,110), and that the image plane is the line x=1 (because, again, we are not dealing with the third dimension).
The image plane is not at x=1. It is a curved surface behind the eye where the image falls after passing through the lens (assume a pinhole camera).
As such, all of this is complete nonsense:
Do it again. Draw a correct diagram, and calculate the projections on the back of the eye. Also, if you don't want to move the eye, then keep both birds within the range of human view by moving them both father away along X, or lowering the higher bird and making the birds smaller.teo123 wrote:The light ray between A and B is y=0, so the projection of B on the image plane is (where the light ray and the image plane intersect) B'=(1,0). The light ray between C and A is y=x, so C'=(1,1). The light ray between D and A is y=10*x, so D'=(1,10). The light ray between E and A is y=11*x, so E'=(1,11).
It should not have. If you were wise, and less arrogant, it should have affirmed that you do not understand something very fundamental to perspective and projection.teo123 wrote:Are their projections equal? Yes, they are. It just affirmed my beliefs.