Message from @tha cheeseburger
Discord ID: 549767532714786847
Yea more then likely
Most flat earthers answer that it only lights up half of the earth using a campfire or something as an example, but u can see a campfire outside of the area that is being lit up
A sun would light up each side of a flat earth instantly, but it doesnt.
Yea
U should also be able to see the ice wall if u went on a high mountain and got a telescope
@tha cheeseburger the sun is close
And
Does not change the fact that night should not be a thing
And light disappears as it gets farther from you
?????????
Yes it's called light and optical slant
That top one is on a globe
The top one is on a flat earth with a dome.
So the sun is like a flashlight
And directs it's light?
Just like in real life.
As for your claim you could climb to a high mountain and see the icewall
@Citizen Z the sun directs it's light?
Incorrect
@Ninja8flash its light isnt infinite due to its proximity or reflection
?
Its proximity to the surface
Oh
Is the sun inside or outside the firmament?
Dont know.
But then it would be sorta just like dim
Also if you go to the point where is gets dark and just move back and forward it should be able to see the sun and then not see it then see it then not, by that logic
On the other side
You can see the sun if you move forward more
Well, it wouldn't make sense if it was inside, light only reflects like that when it's passing through a density barrier
If you move back you lose its light
But if there's nothing outside the firmament, what would the sun be moving in?
But that does not happen
Inside the firmament
So the light goes and then just stops?
These are guessing questions