Message from @mineyful
Discord ID: 600080751127691295
yes you question but dont listen
No one really explained much yet
Comparing a ball that is 5 feet away vs something 93M miles away
K
the moon is a bit closer in your religion
My religion?
No need to get defensive
@RidleyChozo Not the best example. Show the straight line not half way across.
How far is the moon then
no need to tell me how to behave
why is moonlight cold if it's reflecting photons
i dont care how far the moon is
do we really need to debunk this for the 4th time
I do because its important in the debate
no it isnt
Have I told you how to behave then? I have merely asked a question which you have not been interested in answering
“Moonlight is cold, which means the Moon is not reflecting sunlight as we have been told, so we have been lied to by 'scientism' and evil NASA — therefore the Earth is flat!” The moonlight does not cause an object to get colder. It's the object in the shade that gets warmer.
It 100% can be important
the moon has no bearing on earths shape
you told me not to be defoensive
shade makes things warmer @mineyful ? that is easily proven wrong
Ill explain how it does if you give an answer
The lighting of the moon is even. Side to side even. if you shine a light on a ball you do not get even light from it. It is brighter in the center and not so bright on the sides. Light reflects more and more away as it gets closer to the sides.
i have no iterest in your explanation
with the sun it's much hotter and the shade isn't getting all that nice energy from the sun
Only if flat could the moon have such even light.
and in the moonlight it's trapping the heat
The moonlight experiment can be done when the moon is out of sight, you will see the same result
Because youre being stubborn
Or if it is a light source.
I gtg now busy night
yeah if you actually did the moonlight experiment on a new moon (?) you would find it's still the same with the shade being warmer
good shut the door
without the moonlight shade is still warmer in the nightime
@Logad That is nuts. How can you test moonlight without moonlight?
Interesting theory, but there's one problem with your claim @Logad . There is no light to test the shade against when the 'moon is out of sight' lmfao
Is that a flat earther crying?