Message from @AstralSentient

Discord ID: 572959582461100048


2019-05-01 01:30:24 UTC  

Yeah I know but it’s up for debate so

2019-05-01 01:30:53 UTC  

gravitational pull curves water. as fluids do not have a fixed shape, they curve based on the surface

2019-05-01 01:31:11 UTC  

Have to prove gravity

2019-05-01 01:31:38 UTC  

So what's your alternative @jeremy ? Because curvature already explains our observations perfectly.

2019-05-01 01:31:57 UTC  

we've observed gravity enough times. whats your explanation?

2019-05-01 01:32:39 UTC  

I just wanna see the experiment where 2 objects of mass are drawn together because of their mass alone

2019-05-01 01:33:33 UTC  

So you don't have an alternate? Got it.

2019-05-01 01:33:56 UTC  

It’s a bold claim I just wanna see proof

2019-05-01 01:34:28 UTC  

I mean, we see obstruction, simplest explanation is that a bulge of water is obstructing the bottom of the ship

2019-05-01 01:34:47 UTC  

uranus and neptune. they discovered neptune after observing the orbit of uranus, and found out that there had to be another large mass distrubing it.

2019-05-01 01:35:28 UTC  

i heard that flat earthers replace gravity with buoyancy. is that true? @jeremy

2019-05-01 01:35:34 UTC  

Astral we see the ship being obstructed with our eyes

2019-05-01 01:35:43 UTC  

Then we zoom in and their it is

2019-05-01 01:35:44 UTC  

You said ships disappearing over the horizon has been debunked big time. And now you can't provide an alternative explanation that comes remotely close to describing what we see?

2019-05-01 01:35:51 UTC  

I’m not a flat earther

2019-05-01 01:35:55 UTC  

oh

2019-05-01 01:36:07 UTC  

then why are you fighting against the globe?

2019-05-01 01:36:07 UTC  

I’m saying it’s due to perspective

2019-05-01 01:36:19 UTC  

The globe is suspect

2019-05-01 01:36:39 UTC  

If it was really a sphere their would be proof by now undeniable rock solid proof

2019-05-01 01:36:49 UTC  

So it is an illusion that we see water obscuring the bottom of a ship in full resolved view?

2019-05-01 01:37:03 UTC  

There is, some people just can't come to terms with it.

2019-05-01 01:37:49 UTC  

I’m just saying astral no camera no telescope we watch a ship go out to sea with the naked eye it disappears bottom first we know it didn’t go over the curve there

2019-05-01 01:37:57 UTC  

@jeremy Ever seen a sunset from an airplane at ~30,000ft?

2019-05-01 01:38:08 UTC  

I’ll come to terms with it when I see proof

2019-05-01 01:38:26 UTC  

A sunset on an airplane is proof ?

2019-05-01 01:39:37 UTC  

Sure, because our eyes have an angular resolution that isn't very good for precise detection in those purposes, but we have modern optics tech nowadays

2019-05-01 01:39:41 UTC  

I’ve never seen the sunset on an airplane

2019-05-01 01:40:18 UTC  

On a flat earth, the sun is always above you. So if you're on an airplane at 30,000ft and the sun is setting from above you, why does it appear below you?

2019-05-01 01:41:02 UTC  

So when we watch the ship disappearing bottom first with the naked eye that’s not going over the curve even though that was globe proof for a long time when we see it with the camera zoomed in now it’s going over the curve lol cmon

2019-05-01 01:41:24 UTC  

I’m not talkin anything about flat earth I’m talking about the globe

2019-05-01 01:41:38 UTC  

You can see a big ship disappear over the horizon with the naked eye, quite easily.

2019-05-01 01:41:49 UTC  

Lol

2019-05-01 01:42:02 UTC  

Because cameras show ships going over in full view, so we know it happens

2019-05-01 01:42:05 UTC  

Have you ever gone to watch one for yourself?

2019-05-01 01:42:15 UTC  

Yes u see it disappear with the naked eye but then u can zoom in and bring it back into view

2019-05-01 01:42:27 UTC  

No but I can link u to a ton of videos

2019-05-01 01:42:32 UTC  

No it doesn't

2019-05-01 01:42:51 UTC  

How many videos do u wanna watch it happen in

2019-05-01 01:43:04 UTC  

Cameras don't have the same resolution as an eye at 1x optical zoom. No where near the same resolution.

2019-05-01 01:43:22 UTC  

Well, it is at a very tiny angular size so is a blur until you zoom, but they are still in front of the horizon