Message from @Rudi
Discord ID: 550012038580142090
If it were a fisheye lense
Where's the ice wall
I dont see a ice wall
The earth stops at a point it should continue on for a good bit if it was flat
Lmao that isn't proof
The ice wall could be around us
That is just a glacier
No I know 😃
But there are lots of weird pictures of walls of ice out there
Look just go to the ice wall if u see it then u proof the earth is flat if u don't then u make up a lie why it's not there
I've seen plenty of proof showing that the earth is flat. There are no proof's for the globe when you look into it
But there are
Again, show me
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When a ship sails off toward the horizon, it doesn't just get smaller and smaller until it's not visible anymore. Instead, the hull seems to sink below the horizon first, then the mast. When ships return from sea, the sequence is reversed: First the mast, then the hull, seem to rise over the horizon.
He also disappears buttom up
You can see farther if you go higher. If the Earth was flat, you'd be able to see the same distance no matter your elevation. Think about it: Your eye can detect a bright object, like the Andromeda galaxy, from 2.6 million light-years away. Seeing the lights of, say, Miami from New York City (a distance of a mere 1,094 miles or 1,760 kilometers) on a clear evening should be child's play.
We have not superman vision
There's a small hill there
no it's a flat field you can do the experiment yourself
. Think about it: Your eye can detect a bright object, like the Andromeda galaxy, from 2.6 million light-years away. .
That's not a flat field
Look how far you can see there. you can't see forever
U can see stars and stuff much further away
You don't know how far away the stars are and if the earth is flat they are something else than what you have been told
We do know tho
There is no curvature mate.
<:evilblob:507986757753634826>
Different constellations are visible from different latitudes. Probably the two most striking examples are the Big Dipper and the Southern Cross. The Big Dipper, a set of seven stars that looks like a ladle, is always visibleat latitudes of 41 degrees North or higher. Below 25 degrees South, you can't see it at all. And in northern Australia, just north of that latitude, the Big Dipper just barely squeaks above the horizon.
Meanwhile, in the Southern Hemisphere, there's the Southern Cross, a bright four-star arrangement. That constellation isn't visible until you travel as far south as the Florida Keys in the Northern Hemisphere.
These different stellar views make sense if you imagine the Earth as a globe, so that looking "up" really means looking toward a different sliver of space from the Southern or Northern hemisphere.
Copy pasta?
Yea
You can't determine the shape of the earth by looking at the sky
Y not
If every other thing that is large in space is a globe shape y would earth not be as well