Message from @P3TER_
Discord ID: 601828241115709441
ok but one of the postulates of most FE is that the sun is very close
Yeah, I forgot about that
also, if the sun is very far away, why can we see it but we can only see a limited distance on a flat disc?
if the sun is actually very distant, is there still a dome? does that dome cover everything including the sun?
if not, what else is beyond the dome?
I don't know to whom you're asking this questions?
and if there is no dome but a distant sun, then are there also other planets? are they also flat?
i'm telling you why a close sun is actually very important to FE
Ah, allright
So they think that a sun, larger than the earth (although not as large as the sun is, according to NASA) , is inside a type of atmosphere?
usually, the common answer is that the sun and moon are the same size, smaller than earth, and very close to earth (though not close enough to reach by plane)
the ones who believe in a dome often believe that the sun and moon are part of the dome itself or just very close to the dome.
and they believe that they are both self luminescent (the moon doesn't reflect the light from the sun)
and that the moon sends off cooling light
But the sun (for 90% sure) can't be smaller than the earth. It would just have been burnt-out.
They don't think it's a ball of gas. I don't think they have a consensus on what it is, exactly, just that it *isn't* what mainstream science says it is.
The sun on flat earth geometrically has to be around 35 km in diameter
And around 4,300 km away
In that case the sun can't have burnt for 6,000 or more years.
Again, they don't think the sun is a ball of gas, so whether it can sustain itself for 6,000 or more years doesn't really concern them.
The sun would never actually reach fusion at that size.
So they didn't come up with an alternative way of how the sun must produce light?
No, but they don't hide the fact that they don't know.
haha, no, not really. A lot of what they choose to believe is based on direct evidence. And, since you can't visit the sun yourself, you can't really know for sure what it is.
Well, actually I was wrong with my 'sun must've burnt-out-theory' if the sun was only 35 kilometres. It appears to be the following: The larger a star is, the faster it burns up.
However, a sun (according to the best-known theory) probably can't be 35 km in diameter and still be a sun.
no, it would never be able to achieve fusion.
97 has an explanation on why it could sustain fusion or something
I have no idea if it’s bs or not but you should talk to them
I'd be interested to hear that. I'll ask him in the other server
Lol thats an interesting piece of data.
so .. just measure that curve u trolls beLIEve in so much ,, and prove it ur self , //
..
u want ppl to spoon feed u info when u still cling to mainstream bs -- mockery , , -they-are mocking u , the public
Y o-u a-RE ilLe-gibL-e
Speak English
Reminds me of how Mike writes... Mike, is that you?
Mike is vacationing in the ICLOUD of the internet
i'm not a flat earther and looking for a civil debate with one
anyone up
?
Yes, but a glober too
I'm a bit bored by the fact that no flat earther joins the debate.