Message from @AnIcelandicLoser🇮🇸

Discord ID: 628628932228415492


2019-10-01 16:20:50 UTC  

yup

2019-10-01 16:21:16 UTC  

Because the flat earth model is a monopole. The north pole is in the center. I'll get you a pic, hold on

2019-10-01 16:21:21 UTC  

I thought you just said my circumnavigation point made no sense.

2019-10-01 16:21:25 UTC  

H8

2019-10-01 16:22:45 UTC  

north pole is in the center. Following a path on a compass east or west will also navigate you in a circle.

2019-10-01 16:22:57 UTC  

What is this debate about?

2019-10-01 16:23:06 UTC  

not a debate, really, just questions and answers

2019-10-01 16:23:34 UTC  

I know of an easy way to prove round earth.

2019-10-01 16:23:47 UTC  

I had proof but I can't upload images.

2019-10-01 16:23:54 UTC  

No permission

2019-10-01 16:24:03 UTC  

Its to do with the night sky

2019-10-01 16:24:25 UTC  

does it involve two celestial poles?

2019-10-01 16:24:34 UTC  

I said look out at the horizon from a higher point of elevation

2019-10-01 16:24:40 UTC  

cuz that's my fav evidence. :3

2019-10-01 16:24:43 UTC  

It curves

2019-10-01 16:25:29 UTC  

For example, I live in UK and the night sky here is different compared to Canada since they are pretty far away from each other. However, this only works on a round earth.

2019-10-01 16:26:25 UTC  

I never thought about that, you can see different constellations and stars at different points on the earth, that's what you mean right?

2019-10-01 16:26:33 UTC  

Yeah

2019-10-01 16:26:50 UTC  

it's about hemispheres. The southern hemi has an entirely different sky than the northern hemi.

2019-10-01 16:26:56 UTC  

Right.

2019-10-01 16:27:17 UTC  

Key word sphere.

2019-10-01 16:27:32 UTC  

Flat earths don't have spheres

2019-10-01 16:27:45 UTC  

It'd just be north and south I guess

2019-10-01 16:28:04 UTC  

This was what Aristotle discovered on opposite sides of the Mediterranean.

2019-10-01 16:28:53 UTC  

And time zones are a pretty good indication

2019-10-01 16:29:15 UTC  

Yeah, that makes sense

2019-10-01 16:30:02 UTC  

Since earth spins on its axis. So when it's dark in say...Australia it's bright in Britain since they are on opposite sides of earth.

2019-10-01 16:31:15 UTC  

That's what happens when you pay attention in school :)

2019-10-01 16:32:27 UTC  

the night/day cycle is answered by the above the gif I posted, though.

2019-10-01 16:54:45 UTC  

But how does it spin?

2019-10-01 16:58:33 UTC  

Also, how does that gif explain eclipses?

2019-10-01 17:04:03 UTC  

What spin? the sun and moon? Dunno. I've heard some explanations suggest some sort of electromagnetic force, but flat earthers will openly admit they don't know either.

2019-10-01 17:06:05 UTC  

Solar eclipses are explained the same way - the moon travels in front of the sun. Lunar eclipses, though, are tough to explain.

2019-10-01 17:07:54 UTC  

I've heard one explanation of a mysterious *other* celestial body that travels in front of the moon.

2019-10-01 17:33:31 UTC  

the thing is though

2019-10-01 17:33:43 UTC  

solar eclipses are explained by the round earth theory

2019-10-01 17:33:44 UTC  

in general

2019-10-01 17:33:45 UTC  

well

2019-10-01 17:34:03 UTC  

actually by the theory of relativity

2019-10-01 17:34:09 UTC  

and gravity