Message from @Gwendolyn~ 🌺
Discord ID: 624748960770162700
Nor do most models in a flat earth theorized model
there is a spiral inwards towards then center and then back out again as the year progresses
Flat earth models also fail to account for things related to gravity beyond "objects falling"
Do you have a higher resolution
It’s hard to read a lot of the top part
i can read it
Cool
Thank you
ok
Next question if this is to be believed, in June then, since the sun is the farthest away yet the southern states in the US never get colder as the model would suggest with the sun not only elevating but also traveling to the center
@flat earthers ^
Yet it doesn’t it just gets hotter, ontop of that, if the sun was to be centered it would not set, and the rest of the world would be in darkness
Or be affected greatly in their day night cycle anything south of the equator which is observably not true
All of Australia’s would be completely dark for a month or a few months
is there an equator in the flat earth model?
Yes
show me
Bruh
no u
Look at the model you guys just gave me
LOL
there is that label in the above image
why would there be an equator on a flat earth?
It marks the halfway point outwards
middle regional where the sun is most of the time?
<:cool:507986727953235970>
but it is probably affects by things
hello
equator (n.)
late 14c., from Medieval Latin aequator (diei et noctis) "equalizer (of day and night)," agent noun from Latin aequare "make equal" (see equate). When the sun is on the celestial equator, twice annually, day and night are of equal length. Sense of "celestial equator" is earliest, extension to "terrestrial line midway between the poles" first recorded in English 1610s.
ok
declination (n.)
late 14c., declinacioun, in astronomy, "distance of a heavenly body from the celestial equator, measured on a great circle passing through the body and the celestial pole," from Old French declinacion (Modern French déclinaison) and directly from Latin declinationem (nominative declinatio) "a bending from (something), a bending aside; the supposed slope of the earth toward the poles; a turning away from (something), an avoiding," noun of action from past-participle stem of declinare (see decline (v.)). From c. 1400 as "a bending or sloping downward." Related: Declinational.
what
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