Message from @✧Mike Flatbird (Mike Blackbird)✧

Discord ID: 567322889137815553


2019-04-15 12:14:55 UTC  

The fusion is caused by the extreme density of the star itself

2019-04-15 12:15:08 UTC  

Density is a product of gravity, by the way.

2019-04-15 12:15:11 UTC  

@Siriusly <:lul:484994724118134784>

2019-04-15 12:15:26 UTC  

Go on
Disprove it if i'm so stupid.

2019-04-15 12:15:40 UTC  

yep , and
gravity" robs "weight" of its menaing 👌 okie dokie lmao at u

2019-04-15 12:15:45 UTC  

--you are..

2019-04-15 12:15:46 UTC  

STEWPIT

2019-04-15 12:15:49 UTC  

Gravity causes weight

2019-04-15 12:15:51 UTC  

STOOPID

2019-04-15 12:15:56 UTC  

derp

2019-04-15 12:16:01 UTC  

Because weight is just gravity working between to bodies

2019-04-15 12:16:21 UTC  

Disprove me i'd love to see you try

2019-04-15 12:16:31 UTC  

_yawns_

2019-04-15 12:17:00 UTC  

Siri is unfortunately right, we can decipher the components of our sun due to it's blackbody radiation from color, however just because we know what the sun is made out of we can't say how far away it is or how big it is since we can't directly observe those things

2019-04-15 12:17:35 UTC  

<:lul:484994724118134784>

2019-04-15 12:17:54 UTC  

u funnybirds u

2019-04-15 12:17:58 UTC  

So once again
If we know what the sun is made of how does it not burn the atmosphere if it's inside it? Size wouldn't be an issue if you've ever seen nuclear fusion before.

2019-04-15 12:18:37 UTC  

there's lesssss "atmosphere" in/at HIGHER >> Altitudess
. 🍼 🤤

2019-04-15 12:19:00 UTC  

Still enough heat to burn the lower altitudes
The sun is still *inside* the dome

2019-04-15 12:19:07 UTC  

Because we don't know the size of the sun or the distance of the sun, all those things are important to whether or not it would burn us.

2019-04-15 12:19:20 UTC  

I'm not talking about burning the surface

2019-04-15 12:19:31 UTC  

That's another matter entirely

2019-04-15 12:19:54 UTC  

And since clearly it doesn't, we can at least conclude that the sun is a rather small object

2019-04-15 12:20:35 UTC  

The sun has existed as long as earth has, don't you think something that incredibly bright and hot would have done some amount of damage if it were inside of an atmosphere?
With oxygen, nitrogen, helium, and other flammable gases?

2019-04-15 12:21:58 UTC  

Lightning strikes are literally plasma from electrical buildup alone and they can be devastating to their surroundings, while the return stroke is hotter than the sun they only stick around for a fraction of a fraction of a second, the sun's been around for much longer.

2019-04-15 12:22:01 UTC  

Clearly it didn't, which must mean that the sun isn't as "powerful" and huge as we're told. Furthermore, we can't know for sure how old the sun is, so your first sentence is an assumption

2019-04-15 12:22:18 UTC  

If the sun hasn't existed as long as the earth

2019-04-15 12:22:22 UTC  

How did it get there

2019-04-15 12:22:59 UTC  

I don't know, nobody *can* know because we can't directly observe it. Anyone who claims to know is making baseless assumptions that cannot be tested

2019-04-15 12:24:18 UTC  

So my first sentence is an assumption but so is literally any other statement about the flat earth sun

2019-04-15 12:24:26 UTC  

Or at least it's origin or age

2019-04-15 12:26:59 UTC  

Most of them are, yes. A lot of flat earthers are scientifically illiterate and try to come up with weird explanations themselves. Truth of the matter is, nobody can know for certain. The reason why I'm a flat earther is that the evidence for a spherical earth is very wobbly and based on assumptions at best. In that regard I simply apply occam's razor to the question and pick the most simple answer; namely facts what we *can* observe without the needs for assumptions, such as the earth remaining flat at high altitudes and laser experiments showing that there's no curvature whatsoever

2019-04-15 12:28:03 UTC  

I'd like to see those laser experiments tbh

2019-04-15 12:28:55 UTC  

Also thank you for giving actual answers to my legitimate questions
Even the mods here can't do that.

2019-04-15 12:31:14 UTC  

These guys made a series of laser experiments on different lakes to compensate for any differences in altitude, as well as accounting for refraction and whatnot

2019-04-15 12:33:05 UTC  

Did they compensate somehow for the small size?

2019-04-15 12:35:10 UTC  

More or less, IIRC they used a more exact approximation for the supposed earth's curvature rather than the Taylor Approximation used by civil engineering, so even at small distances *especially* they should get results well within the margin of error for approximations